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by Andre Breton,Bill Zavatsky
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by André Breton · Bill Zavatsky. Manifestoes of Surrealism is a book by André Breton, describing the aims, meaning, and political position of the Surrealist movement.
by André Breton · Bill Zavatsky. Best known in the United States as the mastermind of the Surrealist movement and as the author of the dream-logic fiction Nadja, André Breton has always enjoyed in Europe the additional reputation of being a brilliant poet. Bill Zavatsky’s and Zack Rog. Manifestoes of Surrealism. The Hundred Headless Woman. by Max Ernst · Dorothea Tanning · André Breton.
Andre Breton, Bill Zavatsky (TRN), Zack Rogow (TRN) Earthlight. Price for Eshop: 549 Kč (€ 2. ).
Series: Green Integer (Book 96). Paperback: 148 pages. I'm glad to have seen this side of Breton. The forward and introduction are beneficial in augmenting what the Surrealist reader may already know of Breton. I found it provided insight
Series: Green Integer (Book 96). Publisher: Green Integer (April 1, 2004). I found it provided insight. In Breton’s own words you discover there is evidence of a life lived and a depth of experience coming through in the prose.
Written to friends and fellow Surrealists such as Pablo Picasso, Tristan Tzara, Robert Desnos, Francis Picabia, Pierre Reverdy, and Max Ernst, the poems in the collection date from 1919 to 1936, spanning Breton's involvement with Dadaism and his founding of Surrealism.
Andre Breton Books To Read Before You Die Integers. Arcanum 17 (Green Integer) by Andre Breton. What others are saying. Lost Girls ebook by Caitlin Rother - Rakuten Kobo.
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Are you sure you want to remove Earthlight (Green Integer, 102) from your list? Earthlight (Green Integer, 102). Published September 30, 2004 by Green Integer.
Bill Zavatsky's and Zack Rogow's award winning translation of Breton's Earthlight (Clair de terre) introduces the .
His cotranslation of André Breton's Earthlight received the PEN .
His cotranslation of André Breton's Earthlight received the PEN Translation Prize. Zavatsky could be described as a second-generation New York School poet, influenced by such writers as Frank O'Hara and Kenneth Koch. Koch was his professor at Columbia University. In addition to the wry humor typical of the New York School, Zavatsky adds to his poetry an emotional poignancy that gives it additional depth. Like some of his predecessors in the New York School, Zavatsky also excels as a translator of poetry. Earthlight: Poems of André Breton Translator Bill Zavatsky, Zack Rogow, Sun & Moon Press, 1993, ISBN 978-1-55713-095-2.
Best known in the United States as the mastermind of the Surrealist movement and as the author of the dream-logic fiction Nadja, André Breton has always enjoyed in Europe the additional reputation of being a brilliant poet. Bill Zavatsky’s and Zack Rogow’s excellent translation of Breton’s Earthlight (Clair de terre) introduces the English-language audience to the delights—and complexities—of Breton’s amazing poetry. Written to friends and fellow Surrealists such as Pablo Picasso, André Derain, Robert Desnos, Francis Picabia, Pierre Reverdy, and Max Ernst, the poems in the collection date from 1919 to 1936, spanning Breton’s involvement with Dadaism and his founding and development of Surrealism.