Surrealist nonsense as a genre
Item
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Title
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Surrealist nonsense as a genre
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Identifier
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d_2009_2013:6cf9fa3fd667:11753
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identifier
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12373
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Creator
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Fouyer, Nathalie,
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Contributor
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Mary Ann Caws
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Date
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2013
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Language
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English
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Publisher
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City University of New York.
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Subject
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Comparative literature | Dada | Desnos | Jung | Surrealism | Taoism
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Abstract
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For the Surrealists, nonsense was a means of transcending a hierarchical reality; rather than being an absence of sense, nonsense became a frustration of constructed expectations about sense. The layered meanings of a word or image in Surrealism generate a world in which no hierarchy or dichotomies exist but rather one where each word and image bears equal weight. The purpose of this dissertation is to answer the question: in what ways might we consider Surrealist's nonsense a genre. Since Freud, psychoanalysis has been the frame of reference to distinguish the conscious from the unconscious, common sense from nonsense. This dissertation departs from a dichotomous discourse and explores the nonsensical aspect in Robert Desnos' writings and avant-garde films in relation to Jungian's theory and Taoism. Ultimately for Desnos, Jung, Avant-garde filmmakers, and Taoists, action free of preconceived ideas grew to be the aspired mode of being-in-the-world, that which enables us to transcend ourselves.
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Type
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dissertation
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Source
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2009_2013.csv
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degree
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Ph.D.
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Program
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Comparative Literature