Details

ISBN-10: 0472061828
ISBN-13: 9780472061822
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Publish Date: 04/18/1969
Dimensions: 7.97" L, 5.39" W, 0.72" H

Manifestoes of Surrealism (Revised)

Translator: Richard Seaver
Translator: Helen Lane

Paperback

Price: $21.95

Overview

Manifestoes of Surrealism is an essential text by André Breton, a French writer and poet, and co-founder of the Surrealist movement. This volume includes Breton’s 1924 surrealist manifesto, his second manifesto from 1930, and extracts from other letters and works. Drawing on Freudian psychoanalysis, dream logic, and automatic writing, Breton rejects rationalism and embraces the unconscious as a path to artistic and social liberation.

  • Founder, leader, and chief theoretician of the surrealist movement, the poet André Breton was born in Normandy in 1896. A medical student at the outset of the First World War, Breton served in the army at a neurological ward, where he treated patients for post-traumatic stress, including Jacques Vaché, whose iconoclastic views influenced him considerably. In post-war Paris, Breton sought out writers like Apollinaire and Reverdy, began a periodical Littérature with Philippe Soupault and Louis Aragon, and helped form a French contingent of Dada under the leadership of Tristan Tzara. But already Breton and his friends were moving beyond the absolute negation of Dada to Surrealism, a movement rooted in pure psychic automatism, desire, chance, poetry, and the marvelous. Under Breton’s leadership, Surrealism became the most vital European avant-garde of interwar high modernism, its influence extending to Egypt, Japan, and the Caribbean. Exiled to the United States during the Second World War, due to the Nazi occupation, Breton would return to Paris in 1945 and continue to lead the movement until his death in 1966.

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Reviews
"...as rich, lively, and stimulatingly sensitive a book as the truly catholic lover of the arts could desire."
- Publishers Weekly
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Details

ISBN-10: 0472061828
ISBN-13: 9780472061822
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Publish Date: 04/18/1969
Dimensions: 7.97" L, 5.39" W, 0.72" H
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