Czarna msza (Black Mass) is an anthology of Polish science fiction stories in the klerykal fiction genre, published in 1992 by Rebis Publishing House [pl], edited by Wojtek Sedeńko [pl].[1]

Czarna Msza
EditorWojtek Sedeńko [pl]
LanguagePolish
Genrescience fiction
PublisherRebis Publishing House [pl]
Publication date
1992
Publication place Poland
Media typeanthology

History

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In the introduction to the anthology, Sedeńko mentioned that the theme of the anthology emerged as the main topic of the second volume of contemporary Polish science fiction stories (following the first volume, Wizje alternatywne [pl] [Alternative Visions], where this theme was already signaled in some texts) at the convention in Gdańsk in 1990: "A group of writers decided that this should be a mono-thematic collection, with God, religion, and the church serving as the leitmotif".[2] The title was proposed by Andrzej Sapkowski.[2]

The editor noted that "with the exception of three, all the stories were written specifically for Czarna msza".[2]

Table of contents

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Some texts appeared in the retrospective anthology Wizje alternatywne (Alternative Visions), published in 2019 (Stalker Books, 2019).[3]

Analysis and criticism

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In the introduction to the anthology, Sedeńko noted that "I chose [the stories] that I considered the best; when selecting, I avoided like the plague the pro or anti criterion", and also that "this anthology serves as a reliable test of the condition of Polish science fiction and may bring it the scouting efficiency of an ‘early response system’. That was [its] goal".[2]

Marcin Zwierzchowski wrote that the publication of the anthology confirmed the existence of "a phenomenon characteristic only for Poland, klerycal fiction, meaning stories referencing matters of faith or the church".[4]

Jacek Dukaj analyzes that the anthology was intended to present "the tendency [...] of a strong church involvement in politics, which provoked anti-church sentiments and movements". However, science fiction "did not go in that direction".[5]

Adam Mazurkiewicz [pl] assesses that the anthology distinctly reflects the "diversity of aesthetics and ideological proposals significant for the beginnings of religious science fiction [...]. From a retrospective perspective, it can be regarded as a summa of authorial proposals for presenting religious themes in science fiction literature; this is how the editor perceived it".[6]

References

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  1. ^ "Czarna msza" [Black Mass]. encyklopediafantastyki.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2024-11-04.
  2. ^ a b c d Sedeńko, Wojtek (1992). "Wstęp" [Introduction]. Czarna msza: antologia opowiadań science fiction [Black Mass: An Anthology of Science Fiction Stories] (in Polish). Rebis Publishing House. pp. 7–12. ISBN 978-83-85202-66-0.
  3. ^ "Wizje alternatywne (antologia)" [Alternative Visions (anthology)]. eSeF.com.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2024-11-04.
  4. ^ Zwierzchowski, Marcin (2 August 2016). "Fantastyka vs. polityka" [Science Fiction vs. Politics]. lubimyczytac.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2024-11-04.
  5. ^ Dukaj, Jacek (2002). "SF po Lemie" [SF After Lem] (PDF). Dekada Literacka (in Polish) (1–2): 42–49.
  6. ^ Mazurkiewicz, Adam (2014). "Fantastyka religijna jako zjawisko osobne (rekonesans)" [Religious Science Fiction as a Distinct Phenomenon (Reconnaissance)]. In Leś, Mariusz M.; Stasiewicz, Piotr (eds.). Motywy religijne we współczesnej fantastyce [Religious Motifs in Contemporary Science Fiction] (PDF) (in Polish). Białystok: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu w Białymstoku. pp. 35–36.