@webofstories
  @webofstories
Web of Stories - Life Stories of Remarkable People | Adam Zagajewski - The inscrutable world of radio transmitters (5/50) @webofstories | Uploaded April 2019 | Updated October 2024, 1 day ago.
To listen to more of Adam Zagajewski’s stories, go to the playlist: youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVV0r6CmEsFzyCHpawMfzZc5HzhP38Qz7

Adam Zagajewski (1945-2021) was a Polish poet, novelist, translator and essayist. He is considered as one of the leading poets of the Generation of '68 or the Polish New Wave (Polish: Nowa fala) and is one of Poland's most prominent contemporary poets. [Listener: Andrzej Wolski; date recorded: 2018]

TRANSCRIPT: Chapter two begins here, namely with the time I spent in Gliwice where I lived until I finished high school. I hardly travelled anywhere – if I did go away, it was only on short trips but at that time, people didn't go on lots of journeys even around Poland, so I had almost 18 years of Gliwice. And there was the normal routine – I mean, almost normal educational routine – of primary school where I remember my first teacher of those early classes who spoke a little Silesian, in fact her Silesian was better than… I mean, she didn't speak entirely correct Polish, but let's leave her to rest in peace in her grave.

My father, as he'd anticipated, was employed by the polytechnic and had a career there. He became a professor, vice-rector, dean, so considering what life was like then in the PPR he coped reasonably well, and I believe he felt he was succeeding. And yet, there's a different sort of contradiction here. On the one hand, there were his achievements: he was publishing technical textbooks. I remember how I was already fascinated by books and my father had published a few, for instance, a thick volume called Radio transmitters since that was one of the areas in which he specialised. Initially, that was his main area of specialisation, and I understood nothing of that book since it was so very specialised, but I was proud that it existed. I was intrigued by radio transmitters because I'd always liked the radio. I liked it very much and I imagined it provided an extraordinary contact with another world. There was its green eye which would expand and then die, there were short waves, there were broadcasts by Radio Free Europe which were heavily jammed, and there were broadcasts by the BBC which weren't jammed quite so much, and I was proud that my father was writing about radio transmitters... although I couldn't understand a thing, there were a lot of mathematical equations there.
Adam Zagajewski - The inscrutable world of radio transmitters (5/50)Stan Lee - Married life with Joan (12/42)Claudia Roden - Looking for the regional Italian food (47/155)Claudia Roden - The Great Cathedral of Seville (80/155)Claudia Roden - Studying the Jewish culture (71/155)Claudia Roden - Recipes that trigger memories (97/155)Claudia Roden - The cheapest holidays are sometimes best (56/155)Claudia Roden - Learning why my tabbouleh was wrong (121/155)Joan Feynman - My family history: How we were educated (5/18)Claudia Roden - My motivation to do my work (148/155)Claudia Roden - Growing up in Egypt (4/155)Claudia Roden - The grand wedding in Sicily (57/155)

Adam Zagajewski - The inscrutable world of radio transmitters (5/50) @webofstories

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER