Deutsche Gesellschaft
für phänomenologische Forschung

Series | Buch | Kapitel

176210

Variations on the real world

William Earle

pp. 410-422

Abstrakt

André Breton and Phillipe Soupault used to spend afternoons popping in and out of movie houses in Paris, seeing a bit of this film, a bit of that, refusing to observe the names of the films, or remember their plots. Max Ernst defined his surrealist art as "the fortuitous encounter upon a non-suitable plane of two distant realities"; and suggests that in this way "we have already broken loose from the law of identity." Breton, again, in the ">Second Manifesto announces: "Everything tends to make us believe there exists a certain point of the mind at which life and death, the real and the imagined, past and future, the communicable and the incommunicable, high and low cease to be perceived as contradictions."

Publication details

Published in:

Carr David, Casey Edward (1973) Explorations in phenomenology. Den Haag, Nijhoff.

Seiten: 410-422

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-010-1999-6_20

Referenz:

Earle William (1973) „Variations on the real world“, In: D. Carr & E. Casey (eds.), Explorations in phenomenology, Den Haag, Nijhoff, 410–422.