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Against repression : surrealism, sublimation and the recuperation of desire

Title
Against repression : surrealism, sublimation and the recuperation of desire / Klem James.
ISBN
9781787077690
1787077691
Publication
Oxford ; New York : Peter Lang, [2019]
Physical Description
xi, 298 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 23 cm.
Summary
Surrealism has been criticised for having been too steeped in idealism and poetry to have been an effective force for political and personal emancipation in the early twentieth century. The movement, its detractors claim, was conservative in outlook, denying the sexual and material poles of existence, and preferring sublimation over the direct expression of (and engagement with) base desire. These arguments are carefully re-examined and re-evaluated in this book, which focuses on the movement's artistic and political activities of the late 1930s, 1940s and beyond. The book reveals how a more transgressive strand of Surrealist art and thought emerged in France in this period, a strand that is underpinned by an increasing openness to sexual alterity. Surrealist works from this time are considered in terms of their more subversive aspect and shown not only to validate erotic desire but also to challenge the certainties (socio-political, personal) of their audience. Surrealist art and literature are thus presented as actively countering the repressive effects of a socially conservative France, aspiring not only to be at the vanguard of social change but of a change of consciousness in society.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
August 20, 2019
Series
Art and thought.
Art and thought = Art et pensée
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [273]-287) and index.
Contents
Sublimation/Desublimation: a question of definition
Tel Quel critiques of surrealism: idealist, sublimatory and repressive
The Breton-Bataille polemic revisited
Breton's non-repressive view of sublimation and art
Surrealism's inner alchemy: perturbing the senses, awakening the spirit
The surrealist cult of love: extolling the forbidden fruit
Conclusion.
Citation

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