Book contents
- A History of the Surrealist Novel
- A History of the Surrealist Novel
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- I Marvellous Beginnings
- Chapter 1 Autobiography
- Chapter 2 Diverging Genealogies of the Surrealist Unconscious
- Chapter 3 Automatism, Autobiography, and Thanatography in the Surrealist Novel
- Chapter 4 Urban Nature: The City in the Surrealist Novel
- Chapter 5 Nostalgia and Childhood in the Surrealist Novel
- Chapter 6 Surrealist Collage Narrative
- II Transgression and Excess
- III Science, Alchemy, Nature
- IV Transnational Surrealism
- Index
Chapter 6 - Surrealist Collage Narrative
from I - Marvellous Beginnings
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 February 2023
- A History of the Surrealist Novel
- A History of the Surrealist Novel
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- I Marvellous Beginnings
- Chapter 1 Autobiography
- Chapter 2 Diverging Genealogies of the Surrealist Unconscious
- Chapter 3 Automatism, Autobiography, and Thanatography in the Surrealist Novel
- Chapter 4 Urban Nature: The City in the Surrealist Novel
- Chapter 5 Nostalgia and Childhood in the Surrealist Novel
- Chapter 6 Surrealist Collage Narrative
- II Transgression and Excess
- III Science, Alchemy, Nature
- IV Transnational Surrealism
- Index
Summary
Surrealist collage, favouring immediacy over sustained diegetic developments, would seem to contradict the possibility of coherent or cohesive narratives. Yet the elliptical mode of juxtaposition, which replaces in collage the (con)sequential links of conventional narratives, tantalizes the viewer-reader into searching for new links between disparate elements, recalling past stories or imagining potential scenarios. The chapter explores various key examples of surrealist collage narrative in both the verbal and visual fields: the micro-narratives suggested in André Breton’s early collage poems; Benjamin Péret’s collage poems made up of newspaper fragments; Giorgio de Chirico’s or René Magritte’s painted collages of enigmatic encounters; or Czech surrealist Jindřich Štyrský’s erotic scenarios. Focusing in particular on the parodic rewriting of the codes of melodrama in Max Ernst’s collage-novels, the chapter examines how fragments of popular nineteenth-century illustrated novels are recycled into new narratives. Finally, the study proposes a critique of psychoanalytical or alchemical interpretations, hermeneutic models that erase local disruptions in favour of a global coherence.
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- A History of the Surrealist Novel , pp. 102 - 118Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023