Publication | Closed Access
On Ethnographic Surrealism
353
Citations
8
References
1981
Year
Literary TheoryFrenchFolklore TraditionFrench Literary TheorySurrealismCultural StudiesArt CriticismLiterary CriticismFrancophone CulturesCommon DistinctionsFolklore StudyCultural HistoryLanguage StudiesAndré BretonEthnographic SurrealismTransnational HistoryArt HistoryFrench LiteratureFrench CultureFrancophone LiteraturePoeticsVisual CultureEthnomethodologyEthnographic ActivityFrench MediaEthnographyArtsSocial AnthropologyCultural Anthropology
André Breton often insisted that surrealism was not a body of doctrines, or a definable idea, but an activity. The present essay is an exploration of ethnographic activity, set, as it must always be, in specific cultural and historical circumstances. I will be concentrating on ethnography and surrealism in France between the two world wars. To discuss these activities together—at times, indeed, to permit them to merge—is to question a number of common distinctions and unities.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1