Zofia Naà Âkowska (, 10 November 1884 â 17 December 1954) was a Polish prose writer, dramatist, and prolific essayist. She served as the executive member of the prestigious Polish Academy of Literature (1933âÂÂ1939) during the interwar period.
Naà Âkowska was born into a family of intellectuals dedicated to issues of social justice. She was the sister of the sculptor Hanna Naà Âkowska. She studied at the clandestine Flying University under the Russian partition. Upon Poland's return to independence and the establishment of the Second Polish Republic she became one of the country's most distinguished feminist writers of novels, novellas and stage-plays characterized by socio-realism and psychological depth.
From 1928, she was vice-president of the Polish PEN Club. In the 1930s, she took an active part in speeches against the Sanation regime. She was one of the organizers of protests against political persecution in Poland. From 1933, she has been a member of the Polish Academy of Literature.
During the German occupation, she was engaged in underground literary activities and after participated in the work of the International Commission for the Investigation of Hitler's Crimes in Poland. A supporter of the new communist authorities in Poland, Naà Âkowska became a deputy of the State National Council and later a deputy of the National Assembly of the Polish People's Republic.
Naà Âkowska died of a cerebral hemorrhage and was buried at the Powàzki Military Cemetery with full state honours.
Naà Âkowska's first literary success was the Romans Teresy Hennert (The Romance of Teresa Hennert, 1923) followed by a slew of popular novels. She is best known for her books Granica (Boundary, 1935), the WÃÂzà Ây à ¼ycia (Bonds of Life, 1948) and Medaliony (Medallions, 1947).
In her writing, Naà Âkowska boldly tackled difficult and controversial subjects, professing in her 1932 article "Organizacja erotyzmu" (Structure of Eroticism) published in the ' magazine â the premier literary periodical in Poland at the time â that: <blockquote> ...a rational, nay, intellectual approach to eroticism must be encouraged and strengthened, to allow for a consideration of eroticism in conjunction with other aspects of the life of the human community. Eroticism is not a private matter of the individual. It has its ramifications within all domains of human life and it is not possible to separate it from them by way of contemptuous disparagement in the name of morality, discretion, or yet by a demotion on the hierarchy of subjects worthy of intellectual attention: it cannot be isolated by prudery or relegated to science for its purely biological dimension."</blockquote>
On 10 November 2014 Google celebrated her 130th birthday with a Google Doodle.
From May 2024, a manuscript Naà Âkowska's Diary is presented at a permanent exhibition in the Palace of the Commonwealth in Warsaw.