Dywersyjny potencjał apokryfu
Streszczenie
Fundamental to the construction of any apocryphal text is its reference to a canon, which
could be but is not always biblical. Thus by definition, apocryphal intertextual mediatization
 relies on the explicit communication of a world view from the perspective of some
other,  canonical  text,  as well  as  the  confrontation  of  its mediums  and manners.  The
authors of some literary apocrypha indict the canon, discrediting it or calling it into question,
 while others confirm the canon. Yet, in viewing the apocrypha as a complement or a
supplement, as the annotation of an established point of view, as a follow−up or a pre-
−history of the canonical prototype, we can see our convictions about the canon's external
attractiveness  and  semantic  productivity  but  also  its  incompleteness  and  insufficiency.
Thus   each apocryphal text − at   least those that remain related to specific texts − has
a  critical  diversive  potential.  In  this  article,  I  present  the  results  of  the  apocryphal
“hermeneutics of suspicion" arising from a belief  in the  inevitably flawed nature of any
canon, based as it is on an exclusion, a concealment or a marginalization of somebody or
something.  I  have  in mind  the  relatively  stable  literary  canon  of Western  culture,  represented
 here by  literary works  like The Iliad, The Tragedy of Hamlet, Les Liaisons
dangereuses, Robinson Crusoe, and Jane Eyre, and also its apocryphal problematization
by Margaret Atwood,  John Updike, Hella  S. Haasse, Michel Tournier,  John Maxwell
Coetzee and Jean Rhys.
Collections