Man’s Dark Interior: Surrealism, Viscera and the Anatomical Imaginary
- PMID: 27536762
- Bookshelf ID: NBK379263
Man’s Dark Interior: Surrealism, Viscera and the Anatomical Imaginary
Excerpt
Born of the sociocultural effervescence that swept through Europe in the years following the First World War, Surrealism represented a profound disillusionment towards the established intellectual order that it held responsible for the dehumanising and violent depths to which civilisation had so recently sunk. Decrying the inadequacy of postwar philosophies and politics to deal with the new, brutalised world of the interwar period, the Surrealists loudly championed a revolution of perception by replacing the certainties of prewar thought with the unpredictable discontinuities of non-Euclidean geometry, the base materialism of Georges Bataille and, most especially, the dark visions of the human psyche that emerged through Freudian psychoanalysis.
© Edinburgh University Press, 2016.
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References
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- Bataille Georges. ‘The Big Toe’, in Georges Bataille. In: Stoekl Allan., translator. Visions of Excess: Selected Writings, 19272–1939. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press; [1929] 1985. p. 22.
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- Derrida Jacques, Thévenin Paule. In: The Secret Art of Antonin Artaud. Caws Mary Ann., translator. Cambridge, MA, and London: MIT Press; [1986] 1998.
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- Kristeva Julia. In: Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection. Roudiez Leon S., translator. New York: Colombia University Press; [1980] 1982.
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- Lhermitte Jean. L’Image de notre corps. Paris: Editions L’Harmattan; [1939] 1998.
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- Lyford Amy. Surrealist Masculinities: Gender Anxiety and the Aesthetics of Post-World War I Reconstruction in France. Berkeley and London: University of California Press; 2007.
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