What is surrealism?: Selected writings |
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Pagina 108
Moreover, although the organisation and particularly the centralisation of the
movement suffered severe setbacks during and after the second world war, the
spread of surrealist thought never slackened. Repressed in one place, surrealism
has ...
Moreover, although the organisation and particularly the centralisation of the
movement suffered severe setbacks during and after the second world war, the
spread of surrealist thought never slackened. Repressed in one place, surrealism
has ...
Pagina 108
No, Lautreamont and Rimbaud did not see what they described; they never were
confronted by it a priori. That is to say, they never described anything. They threw
themselves into the dark recesses of being; they heard indistinctly, and with no ...
No, Lautreamont and Rimbaud did not see what they described; they never were
confronted by it a priori. That is to say, they never described anything. They threw
themselves into the dark recesses of being; they heard indistinctly, and with no ...
Pagina 166
Since you will be called upon to suffer, too, I wanted to explain certain things to
you before reaching the end of this book. I mentioned earlier the 'sublime peak' of
a mountain. There was never any question of my settling permanently on this ...
Since you will be called upon to suffer, too, I wanted to explain certain things to
you before reaching the end of this book. I mentioned earlier the 'sublime peak' of
a mountain. There was never any question of my settling permanently on this ...
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Inhoudsopgave
Andre Breton and the First Principles of Surrealism | 5 |
1920s | 1 |
Max Ernst 7 | 7 |
Copyright | |
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Apollinaire appeared Aragon artistic attitude automatic writing beautiful believe Benjamin Peret bourgeois Breton Cesaire comrades Conroy Maddox consciousness critics cubism Dada dialectical dream Engels everything existence expression eyes fact Fourier France Franklin Rosemont freedom French surrealist Freud hand Hegel human humour idea inspired intellectual International Surrealist Exhibition Lautreamont Lenin Leon Trotsky less liberation literary literature living Manifesto Marcel Duchamp marvellous Marx Max Ernst means mind moral myth nature never object organised ourselves painter painting Paris Paul Eluard philosopher Picabia Pierre poem poetic poetry Poisies political possible present principle problem proletarian published realise reality recognise regard remains reprinted revolution revolutionary Rimbaud seems sense social society spirit Stalinist struggle surrealism surrealist activity surrealist group Surrealist Manifesto surrealist movement Tanguy texts thought tion Toyen Tristan Tzara Tzara words workers wrote York Yves Tanguy