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Pozycja KAPITAŁ RODZICIELSKI W OCENIE MŁODZIEŻY STUDIUJĄCEJ W UKRAINIE, LITWIE I POLSCE(Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II, 2024) Kwak, Anna; Bieńko, Mariola; Szluz, BeataThe aim of the article is to analyze the transmission of parental capital in the family in the area of competences, attitudes, preferences, values and behaviors. The empirical basis of the article is material collected in quantitative research conducted in 2018-2019 in Kharkov, Lviv, Vilnius, Rzeszów and Warsaw among students aged 20-23. The research was aimed at understanding the image of the family home and assessing the elements of parental capital transferred by mothers and fathers from the point of view of Ukrainian, Lithuanian and Polish students. The obtained results show the difference in the assessment of capital on the mother’s and father’s side. Due to the nationality of the respondents, Ukrainian and Polish students present a similar picture of the analyzed phenomena.Pozycja Matka Polka Destruktorka – dwa oblicza dysfunkcyjnego macierzyństwa (na przykładzie „Szopki” Zośki Papużanki i „Gorzko, gorzko” Joanny Bator)(Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Rzeszowskiego, 2022-12) Głos, MikołajThe aim of the article is to present two different images of dysfunctional motherhood in contemporary fictional Polish prose on the example of the novel “Gorzko, Gorzko” by Joanna Bator and “Szopka” by Zośka Papużanka. The first of them, represented by the protagonist Violetta Serce of “Gorzko, Gorzko”, fits in the current literature trend of creating an anti-mother character, an enemy who usually perceives a child as a “problem” or is unable or does not want / cannot show him or her feelings, because motherhood it is an obstacle for her. The second is represented by the nameless mother of Zośka Papużanka’s “Szopka”, who identifies the so-called “Gastronomic mother”. The analysis shows that Polish prose of the last two decades still lacks the figure of a mother-friend, and the trauma of being born and growing up in the realities of the PRL’s and capitalism has permanently entered the minds of contemporary writers, destroying optimistic hopes for a successful family life and motherhood.