Surrealism against the current: tracts and declarationsBringing together many Surrealist texts that have never previously been available in English, this collection is an essential guide for anyone who wishes to understand the Surrealist movement. Including a wealth of original works, it traces its development in the words of the Surrealists themselves, offering a definitive expression of Surrealism as a collective movement. It shows the extent of Surrealist positions and interests and shows how, having become a major cultural phenomenon of the twentieth century, the issues it has raised remain central to current debates.Covering the period 1922-91, these key texts illuminate its philosophical, political and ethical positions and locate Surrealism in a broader social and cultural context. Comprising statements from Surrealist groups in Paris, Belgium, Romania, Sweden and Czechoslovakia, and signed by the major participants, it reveals the international dimension of Surrealism and shows how it has maintained vitality in response to changing social and political exigencies. Chapters cover the historical orientation of Surrealism; its involvement with revolutionary politics; its ethical concerns and its defense of the 'security of the spirit'; and its position on colonialism. In particular, the volume brings attention to the extent to which Surrealism represented a 'collective adventure' in which their shared interests brought together groups of individuals to explore themes in common. In this sense, Surrealism truly represented, as André Masson once described it, a 'collective experience of individualism'. |
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Pagina 1
SURREALISM. AS. A. COLLECTIVE. ADVENTURE. Here is a meeting of beings
characterised by the same lines of balance. An exalting friendship at the heart of
an elective group which situates itself beyond ideas, beyond the gregarious.
SURREALISM. AS. A. COLLECTIVE. ADVENTURE. Here is a meeting of beings
characterised by the same lines of balance. An exalting friendship at the heart of
an elective group which situates itself beyond ideas, beyond the gregarious.
Pagina 4
took form in 1915 in Zurich and from which surrealism was directly to emerge,
declared its own war on the society that had created the debacle of world war,
declaring its values bankrupt. As the negation of the Dada's negation, surrealism
...
took form in 1915 in Zurich and from which surrealism was directly to emerge,
declared its own war on the society that had created the debacle of world war,
declaring its values bankrupt. As the negation of the Dada's negation, surrealism
...
Pagina 206
Has surrealism vanished? It is neither here nor there: it is everywhere. It is a
phantom, a dazzling haunting. Maurice Blanchot, 1949 SURREALISM IS WHAT
WILL BE. The French Surrealist Group, 1947 To be nothing. To be everything.
Has surrealism vanished? It is neither here nor there: it is everywhere. It is a
phantom, a dazzling haunting. Maurice Blanchot, 1949 SURREALISM IS WHAT
WILL BE. The French Surrealist Group, 1947 To be nothing. To be everything.
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Inhoudsopgave
Note on the Selection of Texts | 19 |
Surrealism visavis Revolutionary Politics | 93 |
The Security of the Spirit | 139 |
Copyright | |
3 andere gedeelten niet weergegeven
Overige edities - Alles weergeven
Surrealism Against The Current: Tracts and Declarations Michael Richardson,Krzystof Fijalkowski Fragmentweergave - 2001 |
Surrealism Against the Current: Tracts and Declarations Michael Richardson,Krzysztof Fijalkowski Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2001 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
accept action Andr6 Antonin Artaud Aragon artistic attitude become Benjamin Peret bourgeois bourgeoisie Breton Christian civilisation colonial Communist Party consciousness consider continue critical cultural declaration defined dialectical domain dream Effenberger everything exhibition existence expression fact forces France French Surrealist Group Georges Gerard Legrand Gherasim Luca human idea ideology individual intellectual internal issue Jacques Jean Schuster Jean-Louis Bedouin Joe Bousquet Jorge Camacho Jose Pierre Lautreamont Lenin liberty manifestations mankind Maurice Max Ernst means Michel Leiris moral nature negation objective oppression organised ourselves Paris Parisian Pastoureau Paul Eluard Pierre Mabille Platform of Prague poetic poetry political position possible Prague principles proletariat protest realism reality recognise refusal Rene Rene Crevel repression revolution revolutionary Robert Benayoun sense social society sphere spirit Stalinism Stalinist struggle surrealism surrealist activity Surrealist Movement tion Toyen tracts transformation Vincent Bounoure Vratislav Effenberger words Yves Tanguy