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Dadaism. --- Aesthetics, Modern --- Arts, Modern --- Dadaïsme --- Esthétique moderne --- Arts --- Dadaïsme --- Esthétique moderne --- Histoire de l'art --- Surréalisme --- Tristan Tzara --- Histoire.
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Cette étude porte sur le théâtre de Tristan Tzara, instigateur du mouvement Dada. L'originalité de ce travail consiste dans l'approche ethno-anthropologique de la dramaturgie avant-gardiste dans ses qualités orale, graphique et écrite. L'auteur remet en question le nihilisme des spectacles dadaïstes en les considérant comme moyens de communication inédits. C'est précisément cette nouvelle forme communicationelle que le public des années 20 rejette comme non-significative. L'analyse de la réception des pièces de Tzara permet de voir un nouveau type de spectateur, doté d'une perception scénique originale qui annonce l'art pluraliste du 20e siècle.
840 "19" TZARA, TRISTAN --- Franse literatuur--20e eeuw. Periode 1900-1999--TZARA, TRISTAN --- Experimental theater --- History --- Tzara, Tristan, --- Dramatic works --- 840 "19" TZARA, TRISTAN Franse literatuur--20e eeuw. Periode 1900-1999--TZARA, TRISTAN --- Alternative theater --- Avant-garde theater --- Theater --- Rosenstock, Sami, --- Rosenstock, Samy, --- Rosenstock, Samuel, --- Ruia, Tristan, --- Dramatic works. --- Tzara, Tristan --- Tristan Tzara --- Experimental theater - France - History - 20th century. --- Tzara, Tristan, - 1896-1963 - Dramatic works --- Tzara, Tristan, - 1896-1963 --- Tzara, Tristan (1896-1963) --- Dadaïsme --- Théâtre expérimental --- Oeuvres --- Théâtre --- Critique et interprétation --- Histoire et critique --- Théâtre d'avant-garde --- Théâtre surréaliste --- Mouvement --- Dada
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Poets, French --- Biography --- Tzara, Tristan, --- Tzara, Tristan --- Rosenstock, Sami, --- Rosenstock, Samy, --- Rosenstock, Samuel, --- Ruia, Tristan, --- Zurich (Switzerland) --- French literature --- anno 1910-1919 --- Burghölzli-Zürich (Switzerland) --- Chūrihhi (Switzerland) --- Cirih (Switzerland) --- Cīrihe (Switzerland) --- Ciurichas (Switzerland) --- Curih (Switzerland) --- Curych (Switzerland) --- Cyrihu (Switzerland) --- Horad Tsi︠u︡rykh (Switzerland) --- Sulishi (Switzerland) --- Sürix (Switzerland) --- Tsirikh (Switzerland) --- T︠S︡i︠u︡rikh (Switzerland) --- Tsi︠u︡rykh (Switzerland) --- Tsurique (Switzerland) --- Turicum (Switzerland) --- Turitg (Switzerland) --- Zirich (Switzerland) --- Ziyūrikh (Switzerland) --- Züri (Switzerland) --- Zuric (Switzerland) --- Zuricu (Switzerland) --- Zürigh (Switzerland) --- Zurigo (Switzerland) --- Zürih (Switzerland) --- Zuriko (Switzerland) --- Zurique (Switzerland) --- Zurych (Switzerland) --- Zyrichē (Switzerland) --- Zyrihu (Switzerland) --- Ζυρίχη (Switzerland) --- Цюрых (Switzerland) --- Цюрих (Switzerland) --- Цирих (Switzerland) --- Горад Цюрых (Switzerland) --- ציריך (Switzerland) --- زيورخ (Switzerland) --- チューリッヒ (Switzerland) --- 苏黎世 (Switzerland) --- Affoltern bei Zürich (Switzerland) --- Witikon (Switzerland) --- Tristan Tzara
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"Intro to Poetry Writing is always like this: a long labor, a breech birth, or, obversely, mining in the dark. You take healthy young Americans used to sunshine (aided sometimes by Xanax and Adderall), you blindfold them and lead them by the hand into a labyrinth made from bones. Then you tell them their assignment: 'Find the Grail. You have a New York minute to get it.'"--The Poetry Lesson The Poetry Lesson is a hilarious account of the first day of a creative writing course taught by a "typical fin-de-siècle salaried beatnik"--one with an antic imagination, an outsized personality and libido, and an endless store of entertaining literary anecdotes, reliable or otherwise. Neither a novel nor a memoir but mimicking aspects of each, The Poetry Lesson is pure Andrei Codrescu: irreverent, unconventional, brilliant, and always funny. Codrescu takes readers into the strange classroom and even stranger mind of a poet and English professor on the eve of retirement as he begins to teach his final semester of Intro to Poetry Writing. As he introduces his students to THE TOOLS OF POETRY (a list that includes a goatskin dream notebook, hypnosis, and cable TV) and THE TEN MUSES OF POETRY (mishearing, misunderstanding, mistranslating . . . ), and assigns each of them a tutelary "Ghost-Companion" poet, the teacher recalls wild tales from his coming of age as a poet in the 1960's and 1970's, even as he speculates about the lives and poetic and sexual potential of his twenty-first-century students. From arguing that Allen Ginsberg wasn't actually gay to telling about the time William Burroughs's funeral procession stopped at McDonald's, The Poetry Lesson is a thoroughly entertaining portrait of an inimitable poet, teacher, and storyteller.
Poets --- Authors --- A Coney Island of the Mind. --- Aldous Huxley. --- Allen Ginsberg. --- Amiri Baraka. --- An Embarrassment of Riches. --- Anna Akhmatova. --- Aphorism. --- Aram Saroyan. --- Arthur Rimbaud. --- Aubade. --- Barney Rosset. --- Beat Generation. --- Bei Dao. --- Bertolt Brecht. --- Black Man. --- Blank verse. --- Boredom. --- Britney Spears. --- Cataclysm (Dragonlance). --- Charles Bukowski. --- Che Guevara. --- Cunt. --- De Profundis (letter). --- Death in Venice. --- Deathbed. --- Edgar Allan Poe. --- Emily Dickinson. --- English muffin. --- Ezra Pound. --- Feral cat. --- Flapper. --- French Colonial. --- French Communist Party. --- From Beyond the Grave. --- Futility (poem). --- Gabriela Mistral. --- Gaggle. --- Gertrude Stein. --- Gregory Corso. --- Guerrilla warfare. --- Guillaume Apollinaire. --- Heir to the Empire. --- Hippie. --- His Family. --- I Wish (manhwa). --- In Another Country. --- Isadora Duncan. --- Jack Kerouac. --- Jacques Maritain. --- James Merrill. --- Jan Hus. --- Jan Kerouac. --- Jim Morrison. --- Joan Vollmer. --- Junkie (novel). --- Kitsch. --- Lawrence Ferlinghetti. --- Libido. --- Lord Byron. --- Marilyn Monroe. --- Max Jacob. --- McSorley's Old Ale House. --- Memoir. --- Mennonite. --- Mexico City Blues. --- Milan Kundera. --- Miroslav Holub. --- Monomania. --- Mr. --- Naked Lunch. --- Nobel Prize. --- Olga Rudge. --- Orgy. --- Patti Smith. --- Pheromone. --- Pocket watch. --- Poet laureate. --- Poetry. --- Pretty Face. --- Pyramid scheme. --- Racism. --- Rant (novel). --- Red Mass. --- Ridicule. --- Shel Silverstein. --- Sodomy. --- Surrealism. --- Take Shelter. --- The New York Times Book Review. --- The Other Hand. --- The Price of Gold. --- The Scary Guy. --- This Country. --- To This Day. --- Tristan Tzara. --- Under the Volcano. --- Wallace Stevens. --- War and War. --- William Saroyan. --- Young Widow.
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An authoritative, richly illustrated history of six centuries of global protest artThroughout history, artists and citizens have turned to protest art as a means of demonstrating social and political discontent. From the earliest broadsheets in the 1500s to engravings, photolithographs, prints, posters, murals, graffiti, and political cartoons, these endlessly inventive graphic forms have symbolized and spurred on power struggles, rebellions, spirited causes, and calls to arms. Spanning continents and centuries, Protest! presents a major new chronological look at protest graphics.Beginning in the Reformation, when printed visual matter was first produced in multiples, Liz McQuiston follows the iconic images that have accompanied movements and events around the world. She examines fine art and propaganda, including William Hogarth's Gin Lane, Thomas Nast's political caricatures, French and British comics, postcards from the women's suffrage movement, clothing of the 1960s counterculture, the anti-apartheid illustrated book How to Commit Suicide in South Africa, the "Silence=Death" emblem from the AIDS crisis, murals created during the Arab Spring, electronic graphics from Hong Kong's Umbrella Revolution, and the front cover of the magazine Charlie Hebdo. Providing a visual exploration both joyful and brutal, McQuiston discusses how graphics have been used to protest wars, call for the end to racial discrimination, demand freedom from tyranny, and satirize authority figures and regimes.From the French, Mexican, and Sandinista revolutions to the American civil rights movement, nuclear disarmament, and the Women's March of 2017, Protest! documents the integral role of the visual arts in passionate efforts for change.
Political art. --- Political posters --- Protest movements. --- ART / Art & Politics. --- Social movements --- Campaign posters --- Political collectibles --- Posters --- Activist art --- Protest art --- Resistance art --- Social art --- Art --- History. --- Political sociology --- Graphic arts --- graphic design --- history [discipline] --- revolutions --- political art --- graphic arts --- Activism. --- Adolf Hitler. --- Adolf. --- Advertising campaign. --- Advertising. --- Alamy. --- Alberto Korda. --- Anti-war movement. --- Apartheid. --- Art movement. --- Ben Shahn. --- Black people. --- Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. --- Caricature. --- Cartoon. --- Cartoonist. --- Charlie Hebdo. --- Che Guevara. --- Civil disobedience. --- Civilization. --- Combatant. --- Communism. --- Dada. --- Defamation. --- Designer. --- Dictatorship. --- Editorial cartoon. --- El Lissitzky. --- Emblem. --- Environmentalism. --- Feminism (international relations). --- Feminism. --- Film poster. --- George Grosz. --- Global warming. --- Guerrilla Girls. --- Gulf War. --- Harper's Weekly. --- Headline. --- Iconography. --- Illustration. --- Illustrator. --- James Gillray. --- Je suis Charlie. --- Jesus Barraza. --- John Heartfield. --- LGBT. --- Le Charivari. --- Manifesto. --- March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. --- Modernism. --- Mushroom cloud. --- National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. --- Nazi Germany. --- Nazi Party. --- Nazism. --- Newspaper. --- Nicaragua. --- Nuclear disarmament. --- Nuclear warfare. --- Nuclear weapon. --- Pamphlet. --- Pass laws. --- Photomontage. --- Political satire. --- Politician. --- Postcard. --- Poster. --- Power politics. --- Princeton University Press. --- Protest. --- Publication. --- Publishing. --- Racial segregation. --- Racism. --- Riot police. --- Sacco and Vanzetti. --- Satire. --- See Red Women's Workshop. --- Sexism. --- Simplicissimus. --- Soviet Union. --- Spanish Civil War. --- Special Relationship. --- Suffrage. --- Suffragette. --- Tear gas. --- Technology. --- Terrorism. --- The Quarto Group. --- Their Lives. --- Thomas Nast. --- Thomas Rowlandson. --- To This Day. --- Trade union. --- Trafalgar Square. --- Trayvon Martin. --- Tristan Tzara. --- Typography. --- Unemployment. --- communication design
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