Surrealist Subversions: Rants, Writings & Images by the Surrealist Movement in the United StatesRonald B. Sakolsky, Franklin Rosemont Autonomedia, 2002 - 742 pagina's From its auspicious beginnings in the summer of 1966 to the present, the Chicago Surrealist Group--and the Surrealist Movement in the United States, which grew out of it--have continued to foment an exhilarating whirlwind of revolt while playfully igniting the sparks of Poetry, Freedom and Love in the crucible of the Unfettered Imagination. In so doing, it has brightly illuminated the pathways of absolute divergence that define the intrinsically anarchist trajectory of the surrealist adventure.Drawing on the full range of U.S. surrealist publications, from the original journal Arsenal/Surrealist Subversion to the very latest millennial communiqué from the front lines of the ongoing battle against miserabilism, this volume contains over 200 texts (more than two dozen appearing here for the first time) by more than fifty participants in the Surrealist Movement, making this the most comprehensive, diverse and lavishly illustrated compilation of American surrealist writings to have ever been assembled.Contributors include: Gale Ahrens, Jennifer Bean, Jen Besemer, Daniel C. Boyer, Paul Buhle, Ronnie Burk, Leonora Carrington, Laura Corsigilia, Jayne Cortez, Guy Ducornet, Rikki Ducornet, Schlechter Duvall, Alice Farley, J. Allen Fees, Beth Garon, Paul Garon, Eugenio F. Granell, Robert Green, Miriam Hansen, Diedra Harris-Kelley, Jan Hathaway, Corinna Jablonski, Joseph Jablonski, Ted Joans, Gerome Kamrowski, Robin D. G. Kelley, Don LaCoss, Philip Lamantia, Clarence John Laughlin, Mary Low, Herbert Marcuse, Tristan Meinecke, Casandra Stark Mele, Anne Olson, Nancy Joyce Peters, Charles Radcliffe, Myrna Bell Rochester, David Roediger, Franklin Rosemont, Penelope Rosemont, Ody Saban, Louise Simons, Martha Sonnenberg, Christopher Starr, Ivan Svitak, Cheikh Tidiane Sylla, Claude Tarnaud, Debra Taub, Dale Tomich, Patrick Turner, Darryl Lorenzo Wellington, Jordan West, Joel Williams, Marie Wilson, Haifa Zangana |
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Pagina 107
... revolutionary humor of our time - are sure signs of a surrealism in constant effervescence , and still growing . Automatically , or so it seems , the group's defiant originality has also given surrealism a new and revolutionary ...
... revolutionary humor of our time - are sure signs of a surrealism in constant effervescence , and still growing . Automatically , or so it seems , the group's defiant originality has also given surrealism a new and revolutionary ...
Pagina 380
... revolutionary activity is an excellent cure . Truly it has been said that workers learn more in a week of revolution than in a decade of ordinary life . Are Workers Revolutionary ? Obituaries for the revolutionary potentiality of the ...
... revolutionary activity is an excellent cure . Truly it has been said that workers learn more in a week of revolution than in a decade of ordinary life . Are Workers Revolutionary ? Obituaries for the revolutionary potentiality of the ...
Pagina 678
... revolutionary , and revolutionary because he is so much a part of his historical time . Thompson reminds us that Blake was first of all an engraver , one of those artisans who stood somewhere between the professional artists and the ...
... revolutionary , and revolutionary because he is so much a part of his historical time . Thompson reminds us that Blake was first of all an engraver , one of those artisans who stood somewhere between the professional artists and the ...
Inhoudsopgave
Foreword | 15 |
IntroductionSurrealist Subversion in Chicago | 23 |
A Note on the Texts | 109 |
Copyright | |
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