Difference between revisions of "Surrealism"

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[[image:I_Saw_Three_Cities.jpg|right|thumb|225px|[[Kay Sage]]. ''I Saw Three Cities''. 1944.]]
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[[Surrealism]], however, offered the young Lacan an alternative route to psychoanalysis and the crucial link to his [[clinical]] [[practice]] in  [[psychiatry]].
  
'''''Surrealism''''' is an artistic, cultural and intellectual movement oriented toward the liberation of the mind by emphasizing the critical and imaginative faculties of the "[[unconscious mind]]" and the attainment of a state different from, "more than", and ultimately "truer" than everyday reality: the "sur-real", or "more than real". In his [[Surrealist Manifesto]] of 1924, [[André Breton]] defines Surrealism as:
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The Surrealists fully embraced [[psychoanalysis]] and during his medical studies Lacan developed strong [[links]] with the movement.
  
:Psychic automatism in its pure state, by which one proposes to express -- verbally, by means of the written word, or in any other manner -- the actual functioning of thought. Dictated by the thought, in the absence of any control exercised by reason, exempt from any aesthetic or moral concern.
 
  
For many Surrealists, this orientation toward transcending everyday reality toward one that incorporates the imaginative and the unconscious has manifested itself in the intent to bring about personal, cultural, political and social revolution, sometimes conceived or described as a complete transformation of life by freedom, poetry, love, and sexuality. In the words of [[André Breton]], generally regarded as the founder of surrealism: "beauty will be convulsive or not at all."
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[[Surrealism]] was a [[literary]] and artistic movement that emerged after the First [[World]] War in [[Paris]], its founding [[figure]] the writer and poet [[André Breton]] (1896-1966).
 
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At various times individual surrealists aligned themselves with [[communism]] and [[anarchism]] to advance radical political and social change, arguing that only transformed institutions of work, the family, and education could make possible a general participation to the surreal.
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[[Breton]] was familiar with Freud's work on dreams and developed a technique of 'spontaneous' writing to give free expression to unconscious thoughts and wishes.  
 
 
The word "[[surreal]]" is often used colloquially to describe unexpected juxtapositions or use of [[non-sequitur]]s in art or dialog, particularly where such juxtapositions are presented as self-consistent [http://uncyclopedia.org/wiki/Surrealism].
 
 
 
 
 
==Philosophy==
 
Surrealist philosophy emerged around [[1920]], partly as an outgrowth of [[Dada]], with French writer [[André Breton]] as its initial principal theorist.
 
 
 
In Breton's [[Surrealist Manifesto]] of [[1924]] he defines Surrealism as:
 
 
 
:'' '''Dictionary''': Surrealism, n. Pure psychic automatism, by which one proposes to express, either verbally, or in writing, or by any other manner, the real functioning of thought. Dictation of thought in the absence of all control exercised by reason, outside of all aesthetic and moral preoccupation.
 
 
 
'' '''Encyclopedia''': Surrealism. Philosophy. Surrealism is based on the belief in the superior reality of certain forms of previously neglected associations, in the omnipotence of dream, in the disinterested play of thought. It tends to ruin once and for all other psychic mechanisms and to substitute itself for them in solving all the principal problems of life."
 
Breton would later qualify the first of these definitions by saying "in the absence of ''conscious'' moral or aesthetic self-censorship", and by his admission, through subsequent developments, that these definitions were capable of considerable expansion.
 
 
 
Like those involved in Dada, adherents of Surrealism thought that the horrors of [[World War I]] were the culmination of the [[Industrial Revolution]] and the result of the rational mind. Consequently, irrational thought and dream-states were seen as the natural antidote to those social problems.
 
 
 
While [[Dada]] rejected categories and labels and was rooted in negative response to the [[World War I|First World War]], Surrealism advocates the idea that ordinary and depictive expressions are vital and important, but that the sense of their arrangement must be open to the full range of imagination according to the [[Dialectic#Hegelian dialectic|Hegelian Dialectic]]. The Marxist dialectic and other theories, such as [[Freud]]ian theory, also played a significant role in some of the development of surrealist theory and, as in the work of such theorists as [[Walter Benjamin]] and [[Herbert Marcuse]], surrealism contributed to the development of Marxian theory itself.
 
 
 
The Surrealist diagnosis of the "problem" of the [[realism (arts)|realism]] and [[capitalism|capitalist]] civilization is a restrictive overlay of false rationality, including social and academic convention, on the free functioning of the instinctual urges of the human mind.
 
 
 
Surrealist philosophy connects with the theories of psychiatrist [[Sigmund Freud]]. Freud asserted that [[unconscious mind|unconscious]] thoughts (the thoughts of which one is not aware) motivate human behavior, and he advocated [[free association]] (uncensored expression) and [[dream analysis]] to reveal unconscious thoughts.
 
 
 
It is through the practice of automatism, dream interpretation, and numerous other surrealist methods that Surrealists believe the wellspring of imagination and creativity can be accessed.
 
Surrealism also embraces [[idiosyncrasy]], while rejecting the idea of an underlying madness or darkness of the mind. [[Salvador Dalí]], who is considered to have been quite idiosyncratic, explained it as "The only difference between myself and a madman is I am not MAD!"
 
Surrealists look to so-called "[[Primitivism (art)|primitive art]]" as an example of expression that is not self-censored.
 
 
 
The radical aim of Surrealism is to revolutionize human experience, including its personal, cultural, social, and political aspects, by freeing people from what is seen as false rationality, and restrictive customs and structures. As [[André Breton|Breton]] proclaimed, the true aim of Surrealism is "long live the social revolution, and it alone!".
 
 
 
To this goal, at various times Surrealists have aligned with [[Communism|communism]] and [[Anarchism|anarchism]].
 
 
 
Not all Surrealists subscribe to all facets of the philosophy. Historically many were not interested in political matters, and this lack of interest created rifts in the Surrealism movement.
 
 
 
By the turn of the 21st century, Surrealist philosophy varied amongst Surrealist groups around the globe. Some Surrealist theorists have stated that Surrealism has somehow "gone beyond" or "superseded" philosophy, or that philosophy has been "outclassed" by Surrealism.
 
 
 
== History of Surrealism==
 
[[Image:La Revolution Surrealiste cover.jpg|thumb|right|Cover of the first issue of ''[[La Révolution surréaliste]]'', December 1924.]] <!--this capitalization of the title seems to be the standard-->
 
 
 
In 1917, [[Guillaume Apollinaire]] coined the term "surrealism" in the program notes describing the ballet ''[[Parade (ballet)|Parade]]'' which was a collaborative work by [[Jean Cocteau]], [[Erik Satie]], [[Pablo Picasso]] and [[Léonide Massine]]:
 
 
 
:''From this new alliance, for until now stage sets and costumes on one side and choreography on the other had only a sham bond between them, there has come about, in 'Parade', a kind of super-realism ('sur-réalisme'), in which I see the starting point of a series of manifestations of this new spirit ('esprit nouveau').'
 
 
 
The Surrealist movement mainly originated in the [[Dada]] movement. While the movement's most important center was Paris, it spread throughout Europe and to North America, [[Japan]] and the Caribbean during the course of the [[1920s]], [[1930s]] and [[1940s]], by the [[1960s]] to [[Africa]], [[South America]] and much of [[Asia]] and by the [[1980s]] to [[Australia]]. There have even been some manifestations of surrealism in [[Russia]] and [[China]]. Some historians mark the end of the movement at [[World War II]], some with the death of [[André Breton]], some with the death of [[Salvador Dalí]], while others believe that Surrealism continues as an identifiable movement.
 
 
 
=== Split from Dada ===
 
Breton's [[Surrealist Manifesto]] of [[1924]] and the publication of the magazine ''[[La Révolution surréaliste]]'' (''The Surrealist Revolution'') marked the split from the more [[Dada]] oriented Surrealists centred around [[Tristan Tzara]]. Five years earlier, Breton and [[Philippe Soupault]] wrote the first "[[Surrealist automatism|automatic book]]" (spontaneously written), ''[[Les Champs Magnétiques]]''. By December of 1924, the publication ''[[La Révolution surréaliste]]'' edited by [[Pierre Naville]] and [[Benjamin Péret]] and later by Breton, was started. Also, a [[Bureau of Surrealist Research]] began in Paris and was at one time, under the direction of [[Antonin Artaud]].
 
 
 
In 1926, [[Louis Aragon]] wrote ''[[Le Paysan de Paris]]'', following the appearance of many Surrealist books, poems, pamphlets, automatic texts and theoretical works published by the Surrealists, including those by [[René Crevel]].
 
 
 
Many of the popular artists in [[Paris]] throughout the [[1920s]] and [[1930s]] were Surrealists, including [[René Magritte]], [[Joan Miró]], [[Max Ernst]], [[Salvador Dalí]], [[Alberto Giacometti]], [[Valentine Hugo]], [[Méret Oppenheim]], [[Man Ray]], [[Toyen]] and [[Yves Tanguy]]. Though Breton adored [[Pablo Picasso]] and [[Marcel Duchamp]] and courted them to join the movement, they did not join.
 
 
 
The Surrealists developed [[Surrealist techniques|techniques]] such as [[automatic drawing]] (developed by [[André Masson]]), [[automatic painting]], [[decalcomania]], [[Frottage (surrealist technique)|Frottage]], [[Surrealist techniques#Fumage|fumage]], [[Surrealist techniques#Grattage|grattage]] and [[Surrealist techniques#Parsemage|parsemage]] that became significant parts of Surrealist practice. ([[Automatism and the computer|Automatism]] was later adapted to the computer.) [[Surrealist games|Games]] such as the [[exquisite corpse]] also assumed a great importance in Surrealism.
 
 
 
Although sometimes considered exclusively French, Surrealism was international from the beginning, with both the Belgian and [[Czech and Slovak Surrealist Group|Czech groups]] developing early; the Czech group continues uninterrupted to this day. Some of what have been described as the most significant [[Surrealist theory|Surrealist theorists]] such as [[Karel Teige]] from Czechoslovakia, [[Shuzo Takiguchi]] from Japan, [[Octavio Paz]] from Mexico, also [[Aimé Césaire]] and [[René Menil]] from Martinique, who both started the Surrealist journal ''[[Tropiques]]'' in 1940, have hailed from other countries. The most radical of Surrealist methods have also originated in countries other than France, for example, the technique of [[Surrealist techniques#Cubomania|cubomania]] was invented by Romanian Surrealist [[Gherasim Luca]].
 
 
 
=== Interwar Surrealism: Centrality of Breton ===
 
[[Image:Breton eluard.gif|thumb|right|200px|[[Paul Éluard]] and [[André Breton]]. ([[Man Ray]]. Private collection.)]]
 
 
 
Breton, as the leader of the Surrealist movement, not only published its most thorough explanations of its techniques, aims and ideas, but was the individual who drew in, and expelled, writers, artists and thinkers. Through the interwar period he formed the focus of Surrealist activity in Paris, and his writings were enormously influential in spreading Surrealism as a body of thought, in such works ''Nadja'' ([[1928]]), the ''Second Surrealist Manifesto'' ([[1930]]), ''Communicating Vessels'' ([[1932]]), and ''Mad Love'' ([[1937]]).  
 
 
 
To further the revolutionary aim of Surrealism, in 1927 [[André Breton|Breton]] and others joined the [[Communist Party]]. Breton was ousted from the Party in 1933.
 
 
 
The late 1920s were turbulent for the group as several individuals closely associated with Breton left, and several prominent artists entered.
 
 
 
Surrealism continued to expand in public visibility. The high water mark, in Breton's own estimation, was the 1936 [[London International Surrealist Exhibition]].
 
 
 
In 1938, Breton (on visit to Mexico) and [[Leon Trotsky]] co-authored a ''[[Manifesto for an independent revolutionary art]]''[http://www.marxists.org/subject/art/lit_crit/works/rivera/manifesto.htm] on the need for a permanent revolution, and attacked [[Stalinism]] and [[Socialist realism]], as the "negation of freedom".
 
 
 
Surrealism also attracted writers from the United Kingdom to Paris including [[David Gascoyne]], who became friends with [[Paul Éluard]] and [[Max Ernst]], and translated [[André Breton|Breton]] and [[Salvador Dalí|Dalí]] into English. In 1935 he authored ''A Short Study of Surrealism'', and then returned to England during the World War II, where he roomed with [[Lucian Freud]] and continued to write in the Surrealist style for the remainder of his life.
 
 
 
[[Acéphale]] was one splinter group that formed (mid-1930s). The group was comprised of some of those disaffected by what they claimed was or what they saw as Breton's increasing rigidity, and structured as a "secret society". Led by [[Georges Bataille|Bataille]], they published ''Da Costa Encyclopedia'' meant to coincide with the [[1947]] Surrealist exhibition in Paris.
 
 
 
=== Surrealism during World War II ===
 
The rise of [[Adolf Hitler]] and the events of 1939 through 1945 in Europe, for a time overshadowed almost all else. However, after the war, Breton continued to write and espouse the importance of liberating of the human mind. For example in ''The Tower of Light'' in ([[1952]]).
 
 
 
In [[1941]], Breton went to the United States, where he cofounded the short lived magazine ''[[VVV (journal)|VVV]]'' with [[Max Ernst]], [[Marcel Duchamp]], and American artist [[David Hare (artist)|David Hare]]. VVV boasted high production values and a great deal of content;  however, its content was increasingly in French, not English. It was American poet [[Charles Henri Ford]] and his magazine ''[[View (magazine)|View]]'' which offered Breton a channel for promoting Surrealism in the United States. Ford and Breton had an on/off relationship. Breton felt that Ford should work more specifically for Surrealism and Ford, for his part, resented what he felt to be Breton's attempts to make him "toe the line". Nevertheless, ''View'' published an interview between Breton and [[Nicolas Calas]], as well as special issues on [[Yves Tanguy|Tanguy]] and [[Max Ernst|Ernst]] and in [[1945]], on Marcel Duchamp.
 
 
 
The ''[[View (magazine)|View]]'' special issue on Duchamp was crucial for the public understanding of Surrealism in America. It stressed his connections to Surrealist methods, offered interpretations of his work by Breton, as well as Breton's view that Duchamp represented the bridge between early modern movements, such as [[Futurism]] and [[Cubism]], to Surrealism.
 
 
 
Breton's return to France after the Second World War, began a new phase of surrealist activity in Paris, one which attracted considerable attention. Membership in the Paris Surrealist Group and interest in it, climbed to above pre-war levels.
 
 
 
Breton's critiques of [[rationalism]] and [[dualism]], found a new audience after the Second World War, as his argument that returning to old patterns of behavior would ensure a repeated cycle of conflict seemed increasingly prophetic to French intellectuals while the [[Cold War]] mounted. Breton's insistence that Surrealism was not an aesthetic movement, nor a series of techniques and tools, but instead the means for ongoing revolt against the reduction of humanity to market relationships, religious gestures and misery, meant that his ideas and stances were taken up by many, even those who had never heard of Breton, or read any of his work. The importance of living Surrealism was repeated by Breton and by those writing about him.
 
 
 
=== Post World War II Surrealism===
 
There is no clear consensus about the end of the Surrealist movement: some art historians suggest that the movement was effectively disbanded by WWII (despite the expansion of membership in the Paris group and the creation of others after that date), others treat the movement as extending through the [[1950s]]. In 1959, [[Andre Breton]] organized an exhibiton in [[Spain]] called ''The Homage to Surrealism'' to celebrate the Fortieth Anniversary of Surrealism which exhibited works by [[Salvador Dalí]], [[Joan Miró]], [[Enrique Tábara]], and [[Eugenio Granell]]. Art historian [[Sarane Alexandrian]] ([[1970]]) states, "the death of André Breton in [[1966]] marked the end of Surrealism as an organized movement." (There have also been attempts to tie the obituary of the movement to the [[1989]] death of [[Salvador Dalí]].) However, this is in direct contradiction to Breton's statement that surrealism would continue after him, and the many manifestations of surrealism after his death.
 
 
 
For example, the Czech Surrealist Group in Prague, though driven underground in [[1968]], re-emerged in the [[1990s]]. Still other groups and individuals, not directly connected to Breton (though the relevance of such a connexion could certainly be questioned as the movement was never conceived of as being tied personally to Breton), have claimed the Surrealist label.
 
 
 
== Surrealism in the arts ==
 
In general usage, the term Surrealism is more often considered a movement in [[visual arts]] than the original cultural and philosophical movement. As with some other movements that had both philosophical and artistic dimensions, such as [[Romanticism|romanticism]] and [[Minimalism|minimalism]], the relationship between the two usages is complex and a matter of some debate outside the movement. Many Surrealist artists regarded their work as an expression of the philosophical movement first and foremost, and [[André Breton|Breton]] was explicit in his belief that Surrealism was above all a revolutionary movement. In addition, many surrealists and surrealist documents have declared that surrealism is not an [[art movement|artistic movement]] for a number of additional reasons, among which is the conception of the "artistic" manifestations of surrealism as just one form of manifestation among many, various conceptions of visual work being created which somehow "goes beyond" traditional conceptions of art or [[aesthetics]], or even the complete cessation of creative visual production. In addition, the art object/product - while an important part of the Surrealist process - is viewed as merely a "souvenir" of a vastly more critical journey, interesting only in so far as it is revelatory of that adventure.
 
 
 
=== Surrealism in visual arts ===
 
====Early visual arts Surrealism====
 
Since so many of the artists involved in Surrealism came from the [[Dada]] movement, the demarcation between Surrealist and Dadaist art, as with the demarcation between Surrealism and [[Dada]] in general, is a line drawn differently by different scholars.
 
 
 
The roots of Surrealism in the visual arts run to both [[Dada]] and [[Cubism]], as well as the abstraction of [[Wassily Kandinsky]] and [[Expressionism]], as well as [[Post-Impressionism]]. However, it was not the particulars of technique which marked the Surrealist movement in the visual arts, but the creation of objects from the imagination, from automatism, or from a number of [[Surrealist techniques]].
 
 
 
[[Image:MagrittePipe.jpg|thumb|left|200px|[[René Magritte]]'s "The Betrayal of Images" (1928-9)]]
 
 
 
[[André Masson|Masson]]'s [[automatic drawing]]s of [[1923]], are often used as a convenient point of difference, since these reflect the influence of the idea of the [[unconscious mind]].
 
 
 
Another example is Alberto Giacometti's [[1925]] ''Torso'', which marked his movement to simplified forms and inspiration from pre-classical sculpture. However, a striking example of the line used to divide Dada and Surrealism among art experts is the pairing of [[1925]]'s ''[[Von minimax dadamax selbst konstruiertes maschinchen]]'' with ''[[Le Baiser]]'' from [[1927]] by Max Ernst. The first is generally held to have a distance, and erotic subtext, where as the second presents an erotic act openly and directly. In the second the influence of Miró and Picasso's drawing style is visible with the use of fluid curving and intersecting lines and colour, where as the first takes a directness that would later be influential in movements such as [[Pop art]].
 
 
 
[[Giorgio de Chirico]] was one of the important joining figures between the philosophical and visual aspects of Surrealism. Between [[1911]] and [[1917]], he adopted a very primary colour palette, and unornamented epictional style whose surface would be adopted by others later. ''La tour rouge'' from [[1913]] shows the stark colour contrasts and illustrative style later adopted by Surrealist painters. His [[1914]] ''La Nostalgie du poete'' has the figure turned away from the viewer, and the juxtaposition of a bust with glasses and a fish as a relief which defies conventional realistic explanation. He was also a writer. His novel ''[[Hebdomeros]]'' presents a series of dreamscapes, with an unusual use of punctuation, syntax and grammar, designed to create a particular atmosphere and frame around its images. His images, including set designs for the [[Ballet Russe]], would create a decorative form of visual Surrealism, and he would be an influence on the two that would be even more closely associated with Surrealism in the public mind: [[Salvador Dalí|Dalí]] and [[Magritte]].
 
 
 
In [[1924]], [[Joan Miró|Miro]] and [[André Masson|Masson]] applied Surrealism theory to painting explicitly leading to the ''La Peinture Surrealiste'' Exposition at Gallerie Pierre in [[1925]], which included work by [[Man Ray]], Masson, Klee and Miró among others. It confirmed that Surrealism had a component in the visual arts (though it had been initially debated whether this was possible), techniques from Dada, such as [[photomontage]] were used.
 
 
 
[[Galerie Surréaliste]] opened on [[March 26]], [[1926]] with an exhibition by [[Man Ray]].
 
 
 
Breton published ''Surrealism and Painting'' in [[1928]] which summarized the movement to that point, though he continued to update the work until the [[1960s]].
 
 
 
====1930s====
 
[[Image:The Persistence of Memory.jpg|thumb|240px|[[Salvador Dalí]]. ''[[The Persistence of Memory]]''. 1931.]]
 
 
 
[[Dalí]] and [[Magritte]] created the most widely recognized images of the movement. Dalí joined the group in [[1929]], and participated in the rapid establishment of the visual style between [[1930]] and [[1935]].
 
 
 
Surrealism as a visual movement had found a method: to expose psychological truth by stripping ordinary objects of their normal significance, in order to create a compelling image that was beyond ordinary formal organization, in order to evoke empathy from the viewer.
 
 
 
[[1931]] marked a year when several Surrealist painters produced works which marked turning points in their stylistic evolution: Magritte's ''[[La Voix des airs]]'' is an example of this process, where three large spheres representing bells hanging above a landscape. Another Surrealist landscape from this same year is [[Yves Tanguy|Tanguy]]'s ''[[Palais promontoire]]'', with its molten forms and liquid shapes. Liquid shapes became the trademark of Dalí, particularly in his ''[[The Persistence of Memory]]'', which features the image of clocks that sag as if they are made out of cloth.
 
 
 
The characteristics of this style: a combination of the depictive, the abstract, and the psychological, came to stand for the alienation which many people felt in the [[Modernism|modern]] period, combined with the sense of reaching more deeply into the psyche, to be "made whole with ones individuality".
 
  
Long after personal, political and professional tensions broke up the Surrealist group, Magritte and Dalí continued to define a visual program in the arts. This program reached beyond painting, to encompass photography as well, as can be seen from a Man Ray self portrait, whose use of assemblage influenced [[Robert Rauschenberg]]'s collage boxes.
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Similarly, Surrealist painters such as [[Dali]] attempted to paint the '[[reality]]' of their [[dreams]], which they saw as more '[[real]]' than the prosaic reality of our everyday world.  
  
During the [[1930s]] [[Peggy Guggenheim]], an important art collector married [[Max Ernst]] and began promoting work by other Surrealists such as [[Yves Tanguy]] and the British artist [[John Tunnard]]. However, by the outbreak of the [[Second World War]], the taste of the [[avant-garde]] swung decisively towards [[Abstract Expressionism]] with the support of key taste makers, including Guggenheim. However, it should not be easily forgotten that Abstract Expressionism itself grew directly out of the meeting of American (particularly New York) artists with European Surrealists self-exiled during WWII. In particular, [[Arshile Gorky]] influenced the development of this American art form, which - as Surrealism did - celebrated the instantaneous human act as the well-spring of creativity. The early work of many Abstract Expressionists reveals a tight bond between the more superficial aspects of both movements, and the emergence (at a later date) of aspects of Dadaistic humor in such artists as Rauschenberg sheds an even starker light upon the connection. Up until the emergence of Pop Art, Surrealism can be seen to have been the single most important influence on the sudden growth in American arts, and even in Pop, some of the humor manifested in Surrealism can be found, often turned to a cultural criticism.
 
  
====World War II and beyond====
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In 1932, and within this context, [[Lacan]] completed his doctoral [[thesis]] on [[Paranoid Psychosis and Its Relations to the Personality]].
[[Image:ElleLogeLaFolie_1970.jpg|thumb|400px|right|[[Roberto Matta]]. ''Elle Loge La Folie'', oil on canvas, 1970.]]
 
  
The coming of the Second World War proved disruptive for surrealism.
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Around the same [[time]] he entered [[analysis]] with [[Rudolph Loewenstein]], the SPP's most famous [[training]] [[analyst]] (a recognized [[psychoanalyst]] who is qualified to train [[other]] [[analysts]] within the [[Society]]).  
  
The works continued. Many Surrealist artists continued to explore their vocabularies, including Magritte. Many members of the Surrealist movement continued to correspond and meet. (In [[1960]], Magritte, Duchamp, Ernst, and Man Ray met in Paris.) While Dalí may have been excommunicated by Breton, he neither abandoned his themes from the [[1930s]], including references to the "persistence of time" in a later painting, nor did he become a depictive "pompier". His classic period did not represent so sharp a break with the past as some descriptions of his work might portray, and some, such as Thirion, argued that there were works of his after this period that continued to have some relevance for the movement.
 
  
During the [[1940s]] Surrealism's influence was also felt in England and America. [[Mark Rothko]] took an interest in bimorphic figures, and in England [[Henry Moore]], [[Lucian Freud]], [[Francis Bacon (painter)|Francis Bacon]] and [[Paul Nash]] used or experimented with Surrealist techniques. However, [[Conroy Maddox]], one of the first British Surrealists, beginning in [[1935]], remained within the movement, organizing an exhibition of current Surrealist work in [[1978]], in response to an exhibition which infuriated him because it did not properly represent Surrealism. The exhibition, titled ''Surrealism Unlimited'' was in Paris, and attracted international attention. He held his last one man show in [[2002]], just before his death in [[2005]].
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During this time, Lacan's links with the Surrealists developed further.  
  
Magritte's work became more realistic in its depiction of actual objects, while maintaining the element of juxtaposition, such as in [[1951]]'s ''Personal Values'' and [[1954]]'s ''Empire of Light''. Magritte continued to produce works which have entered artistic vocabulary, such as ''Castle in the Pyrenees'' which refers back to ''Voix'' from [[1931]], in its suspension over a landscape.
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He was a friend of [[André Breton]] and [[Salvador Dali]], and was later to become the painter [[Pablo Picasso]]'s (1881-1973) personal physician.  
  
Other figures from the Surrealist movement were expelled, [[Roberto Matta]] for example, but by their own description "remained close to Surrealism."
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He attended the first [[public]] readings of [[James Joyce]]'s (1882-1941) [[Ulysses]] in 1921 and was a well-known figure in the cafés and bookshops of Paris's [[Left]] Bank.  
  
Many new artists explicitly took up the Surrealist banner for themselves. Duchamp continued to produce sculpture and, at his death, was working on an installation with the realistic depiction of a woman viewable only through a peephole. [[Dorothea Tanning]] and [[Louise Bourgeois]] continued to work, for example with Tanning's ''Rainy Day Canape'' from [[1970]].
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In 1933 Dali was to refer to Lacan's [[doctoral thesis]] in the first issue of the Surrealist review [[Minotaure]] and Lacan himself was to make many contributions to this and other Surrealist publications.
  
The [[1960s]] saw an expansion of Surrealism with the founding of [[West Coast Surrealist Group|The West Coast Surrealist Group]] as recognized by Breton's personal assistant [[Jose Pierre]] and also the [[Surrealist Movement in the United States]].
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Lacan's doctoral thesis, then, was written in a largely anti-[[psychoanalytic]] [[culture]] and remained within established [[psychiatric]] [[categories]] and theories, but at the same time it drew on the alternative resources of the Surrealist movement.
  
Surrealistic art remains enormously popular with museum patrons. In [[2001]] [[Tate Modern]] held an exhibition of Surrealist art that attracted over 170,000 visitors in its run. Having been one of the most important of movements in the Modern period, Surrealism proceeded to inspire a new generation seeking to expand the vocabulary of art.
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===Surrealism in literature===
 
The first surrealist work, according to Breton, was ''Les Champs Magnétiques'' ([[1921]] “Magnetic Fields”), which was actually a collaboration with the French poet and novelist [[Philippe Soupault]]. But even before that, in [[1919]], [[André Breton|Breton]], [[Philippe Soupault|Soupault]] and [[Louis Aragon|Aragon]] had already published the magazine ''Littérature'', which contained automatist works and accounts of dreams. The magazine and the portfolio both showed their disdain for literal meanings given to objects and focused rather on the undertones, the poetic undercurrents present. Not only did they give emphasis to the poetic undercurrents, but also to the connotations and the overtones which “exist in ambiguous relationships to the visual images.”
 
  
Because surrealist writers seldom (if ever) appear to organize their thoughts and the images they present, some people find much of their work difficult to "parse". This notion however is a superficial comprehension, prompted no doubt by Breton's initial emphasis on automatic writing as the main route toward a higher reality. But - as in Breton's case itself - much of what is presented as purely automatic is actually edited and very "thought out". Breton himself later admitted that automatic writing's centrality had been overstated, and other elements were introduced, especially as the growing involvement of visual artists in the movement forced the issue, since "automatic painting" required a rather more strenuous set of approaches. Thus such elements as collage were introduced, arising partly from an ideal of startling juxtapositions as revealed in Pierre Reverdy's poetry. And - as in Magritte's case (where there is no obvious recourse to either automatic techniques or collage) the very notion of convulsive joining became a tool for revelation in and of itself. Surrealism was meant to be always in flux - to be more modern than modern - and so it was natural there should be a rapid shuffling of the philosophy as new challenges arose.
 
  
Surrealists revived interest in [[Isidore Ducasse]], known by his pseudonym “Le Comte de Lautréamont” and for the line “beautiful as the chance meeting on a dissecting table of a sewing machine and an umbrella”, and [[Arthur Rimbaud]], two late [[19th century]] writers believed to be the precursors of Surrealism.
 
 
Examples of surrealist literature are [[René Crevel]]'s, ''Mr. Knife Miss Fork'', [[Louis Aragon]]'s, ''Irene's Cunt'', [[André Breton]]'s, ''Sur la route de San Romano'', [[Benjamin Peret]]'s, ''Death to the Pigs'', [[Antonin Artaud]]'s, ''Le Pese-Nerfs''.
 
 
===Surrealism in music===
 
 
:''Main article: [[Surrealism (music)]].''
 
 
In the [[1920s]] several composers were influenced by Surrealism, or by individuals in the Surrealist movement. Among these were [[Bohuslav Martinu]], [[André Souris]], and [[Edgard Varèse]], who stated that his work ''Arcana'' was drawn from a dream sequence. Souris in particular was associated with the movement: he had a long, if sometimes spotty, relationship with [[Magritte]], and worked on [[Paul Nouge]]'s publication ''Adieu Marie''.
 
  
French composer [[Pierre Boulez]] wrote a piece called ''explosante-fixe'' (1972), inspired by Breton's ''mad love''.
 
 
[[Germaine Tailleferre]] of the French group Les Six wrote several works which could be considered to be inspired by Surrealism, including the 1948 Ballet "Paris-Magie" (scenario by [[Lise Deharme]], who was closely linked to Breton), the Operas "La Petite Sirène" (book by Philippe Soupault) and "Le Maître" (book by Eugène Ionesco). Tailleferre also wrote popular songs to texts by Claude Marci, the wife of Henri Jeanson, whose portrait had been painted by Magritte in the 1930s.
 
 
Even though Breton by [[1946]] responded rather negatively to the subject of music with his essay ''Silence is Golden,'' later Surrealists have been interested in - and found parallels to - Surrealism in the improvisation of [[jazz]] (as alluded to above), and the [[blues]] (Surrealists such as [[Paul Garon]] have written articles and full-length books on the subject). Jazz and blues musicians have occasionally reciprocated this interest. For example, the [[1976 World Surrealist Exhibition]] included such performances by [[Honeyboy Edwards]].
 
 
Surrealists have also been influenced by [[reggae]] and, later, [[hip hop music|rap]] and some rock or pop bands such as [[The Psychedelic Furs]]. In addition to musicians who have been influenced by Surrealism (including some influence in rock — the title of the [[1967]] [[psychedelic music|psychedelic]] [[Jefferson Airplane]] album ''[[Surrealistic Pillow]]'' was obviously inspired by the movement), such as the experimental group [[Nurse With Wound]] (whose album title ''Chance meeting on a dissecting table of a sewing machine and umbrella'' is taken from a line in [[Lautreamont]]'s ''Maldoror''). Surrealist music has included such explorations as those of [[Hal Rammel]]. More importantly, the ideas of chance have been used by such modern musical artists as [[David Bowie]] [[Brian Eno]] who - in turn - have sometimes mentioned either [[Dada|Dadaists]] or Surrealists in their work.
 
  
===Surrealism in film===
 
 
Surrealist [[film]]s include ''[[Un chien andalou]]'' and ''[[L'Âge d'Or]]'' by [[Luis Buñuel]] and [[Dalí]]; Buñuel went on to direct many more. There is also a strong surrealist influence present in [[Alain Resnais]]'s ''[[Last Year at Marienbad]]''
 
 
Surrealist and film theorist [[Robert Benayoun]] has written books on [[Tex Avery]], [[Woody Allen]], [[Buster Keaton]] and the [[Marx Brothers]].
 
 
Some have described [[David Lynch]] as a Surrealist filmmaker. Some aspects of many of his films are of Surrealist interest, although his work is not submersed in surrealism.
 
 
Czech surrealist [[Jan Svankmajer]] has also made a number of surrealist films.[http://www.illumin.co.uk/svank/films/filmogac.html]
 
  
The truest aspects of Surrealism in film are often found in passing frames of a larger film; the sudden emergence of the uncanny into the "normal" which may or may not be further explored in the rest of the film. The original group spent hours going from film to film, often not finishing one before seeking another, partly in hopes of catching just such [[ephemeral]] moments, and partly with the idea of "stitching together" a film in their own minds out of the disparate parts.
 
  
Surreal Films
 
[http://wayney.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/surreal.htm]
 
  
===Surrealism in television===
 
 
Some have found the [[television]] series ''[[The Prisoner]]'' to be of Surrealist interest.
 
 
[[Tex Avery]] cartoons originated on film in the 1930s and 1940s, but millions more know his famous characters from Saturday morning cartoons replayed during the 1970s: [[Bugs Bunny]], [[Daffy Duck]], etc.
 
  
===Surrealism in politics===
 
 
The 1968 revolt in France was arguably based on or included a number of surrealist ideas, and among the slogans the students spray-painted on the walls of the Sorbonne were familiar surrealist ones. [[Joan Miró]] would commemorate this in a painting entitled ''May 1968.''
 
 
During the 1980s, behind the Iron Curtain, Surrealism entered into politics, and this thanks to an underground artistic opposition movement known as the [[Orange Alternative]]. The Orange Alternative was created in 1981 by [[Waldemar Fydrych]] alias "Major", a graduate of history and art history at the University of [[Wroclaw]], who used surrealism symbolism and terminology in its large scale happenings organized in the major Polish cities during the [[Jaruzelski]] regime and painted surrealist graffiti on spots covering up anti-regime slogans. Major himself was the author of the so-called "Manifest of Socialist Surrealism". In this Manifest, he stated that the socialist (communist) system had become so surrealistic that it could be seen as an expression of art itself.
 
  
===Surrealism in comedy===
 
  
:''Main article: [[Surreal humour]].''
 
  
Some branches of comedy (mostly [[British]]) are very surreal. Some examples include:
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Begun as an investigation of poetic [[images]] and [[language]], their sources, their [[nature]], and specific features, surrealism is a movement of [[ideas]], of artistic creation and [[action]] based explicitly on [[Freudian]] discoveries, which were used to develop an original [[theory]] of language and [[creativity]]. In later years it adopted [[Hegelian]] dialectics and [[Marxist]]-Leninist historical [[materialism]]. The "[[social]] and martial cataclysm" (Breton, 1934) provoked a [[revolt]] by an entire generation.
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The movement was founded in Paris in 1924 by [[French]] poet André Breton, with the support of a group of poets and painters. The [[presence]] of Max Ernst, from [[Germany]], Man Ray, from the [[United States]], and Joan Miró, a Catalan, gave the group its international flavor. Surrealism's [[goal]] was to "[[change]] [[life]]" (Arthur Rimbaud) by freeing humanity from the constraints of [[mental]] or social [[censorship]] as well as [[economic]] oppression: "[[Poetry]] is made by everyone. Not by one" (Lautréamont).
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The [[project]] made little [[sense]] to [[Freud]], who refused his patronage (Freud to Breton, 1933e [1932]; to Zweig, July 20, 1938 (1960a [1873-1939])). Breton visited Freud in [[Vienna]] in 1921 and corresponded with him in 1932 [[about]] <i>The [[Interpretation]] of Dreams</i>. In 1937 he asked him to contribute to a planned anthology (<i>Trajectoire du rêve</i>, 1938). Freud answered: "A collection of dreams without their [[associations]], without [[understanding]] the circumstances in which someone dreamed, doesn't mean anything to me, and I have a hard time understanding what it might mean to [[others]]" (Breton, 1938, I).
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These associations were generally omitted by the surrealists when they narrated their dreams. They appear in André Breton's <i>The [[Communicating]] Vases</i> (1932), but there the [[author]], denying the "[[dream]] [[navel]]" for the sake of Marxist-Leninist materialism, felt he could use [[them]] to bring into focus all his dream [[thoughts]]. He claimed, contrary to Freud, that the dream was a creator, an instigator to action, and capable of [[dialectically]] resolving the [[contradiction]] between [[desire]] and reality. Surrealism ignored [[therapy]].
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There are several periods to the [[history]] of surrealism. Its "[[prehistory]]" dates from 1916 (Breton discovers Freud) to 1924. This was the period of the review <i>Littérature</i> (1919). Together with Breton, a group of young artists invented surrealist techniques intended to liberate the [[unconscious]]: automatic [[writing]] and drawing, hypnotic [[sleep]], hypnagogic visions, dream narratives, group creation, [[oral]] and written [[games]], collage, rubbings, decals, experimental [[photography]] and theater. The publication of the first <i>Surrealist Manifesto</i> (Breton, 1924) ushered in Surrealism's formative period. The group had a journal of its own, <i>La Révolution surréaliste</i>. "We must be thankful for Freud's discoveries," wrote Breton, "the [[imagination]] may be on the point of winning back its rights."
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In 1927 André Breton, Louis [[Aragon]], PaulÉluard, and [[Benjamin]] Peret joined the [[Communist]] Party. Breton did not, however, abandon Freud: "The Surrealism that, as we have seen, has adopted Marxist beliefs does not intend to treat lightly the Freudian critique of ideas" (Breton, 1930). Breton soon quit the Communist Party, which reproached him for his Freudianism. Surrealism embraced [[cinema]] (Luis Buñuel), the [[construction]] of [[objects]] ("[[Situation]] surréaliste de l'[[objet]]," Breton, 1935), and produced important works of art in every field.
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But in 1930, in his <i>Second Manifesto of Surrealism</i>, Breton acknowledged the [[existence]] of a profound crisis. The [[third]] period of Surrealism was about to begin. A new review was introduced, <i>Le Surréalisme au service de la Révolution</i>. In 1930 the review published two articles by the French-American psychoanalyst Jean FroisWittmann, in 1933 the Breton-Freud correspondence of 1932, a favorable critique of [[Jacques Lacan]]'s [[doctoral dissertation]] by René Crevel, and, also by Crevel, an attack on an article in the <i>Revue française de [[psychanalyse]]</i>. The review also published the first [[texts]] by Salvador Dali, where he developed the [[idea]] of "critical-[[paranoia]]," the use of the interpretative [[processes]] of paranoia for creative ends, and the exploration of the unconscious.
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In 1933 <i>Minotaure</i> appeared. Although it was not the [[official]] [[voice]] of the group, it was strongly influenced by it. The first issue included articles on the "contributions of psychoanalysis." Lacan and Dalí explained their conceptions of paranoia as an [[active]] [[psychic]] phenomenon, which Dalí compared with the [[passivity]] he associated with dreams and automatic writing. Several large-scale international exhibitions confirmed the growth of surrealism around the world, a phenomenon that accelerated during the Second World War following the exile of Breton, André Masson, and Max Ernst in the United States, and Benjamin Péret in [[Mexico]], and continued after the war.
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Breton, the principal theorist of the group, maintained a close [[association]] with Freudian [[thought]] throughout his career. He was most interested in the [[logic]] of the unconscious, in conflicts between the ego, the id, and the [[superego]], relating them to the [[process]] of artistic creation, to Freudian ideas of [[sexuality]], [[fantasy]], [[desire,]] [[repression]], the [[death]] [[instinct]], whose opposition to [[Eros]] he assumed to be [[dialectical]] (Breton, 1930), and especially to ideas about [[representation]] and [[perception]] (Breton, 1933). Beginning with his [[concept]] of "pure mental representation," situated "beyond [[true]] perception," he examined, in the context of the <i>Essais de psychanalyse</i> (1927), how the transition from the unconscious to the perception-[[consciousness]] [[system]] takes [[place]] in the creative [[individual]]. For Breton, as a reader of Freud, it was at the [[preconscious]] level that language and the traces of acoustic and [[visual]] perceptions were united and charged with [[affect]]. But Breton went further: he saw in these preconscious elements the raw [[material]] of creation, obtained by the removal of repression with the [[help]] of automatic writing and drawing. In creating a [[work]] of art, the [[artist]] would make the individual [[universal]] (Breton, 1935).
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In a [[letter]] to Stefan Zweig, Freud, who had met Salvador Dalí in [[London]], also associated the fundamental elements of the work of the artist with the preconscious, but he added a [[principle]] of [[economy]]: "From the critical point of view it could still be maintained that the [[notion]] of art defies expansion as long as the quantitative proportion of unconscious material and preconscious [[treatment]] does not remain within definite limits" (July 20, 1938). The specific task of the creative individual, the result of his "initiative" (Breton) is to manipulate the relation between unconscious and preconscious elements, and objectify them in a work of art. Repression would have to be removed using "surrealist techniques" (Breton). Freud's meeting with Dalí seems to be the only time when Freud made an effort to [[understand]] the surrealist use of psychoanalysis and compare it with his own beliefs.
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There were other points of contact between [[surrealism and psychoanalysis]]: Adrien Borel discussed his surrealist experiences (1925); Salvador Dalí and René Crevel interviewed Jacques Lacan; Crevel, Antonin Artaud, and Robert Desnos were [[analyzed]] by René Allendy, which they later wrote about. André Embiricos, a surrealist poet and theoretician as well as a psychoanalyst, founded, together with [[Marie Bonaparte]], the Greek Psychoanalytic Society.
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[[Lacanian]] thought developed throughout the nineteen-sixties, and, although it has a [[number]] of affinities with surrealism, it has always remained distinct. In 1971 the surrealist painter and [[philosopher]] René Passeron, with his research team at the C.N.R.S., founded<i>Études poïétiques</i>, which analyzed the creative process and made use of Freudian theory. A number of [[psychoanalysts]] (André Berge, Jean-Bertrand Pontalis, Guy Rosolato) were interested in the surrealists. As Breton found in 1934, the scope of surrealism, through the upheaval of sensibility it entails, "is socially incalculable." As a movement it has frequently helped the spread of psychoanalysis.
  
* ''[[The Goon Show]]''
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==more==
* ''[[Monty Python]]''
+
The legacy of surrealism
* [[Reeves and Mortimer]]
 
* ''[[Green Wing]]''
 
* ''[[The Goodies]]''
 
  
==Surrealism in the Philosophy of Science==
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I begin this chapter by explaining why the surrealists were so fascinated by Freud, and [[outline]] the ways in which they explored the workings of the unconscious through the use of various techniques. After suggesting some of Lacan's connections and convergences with the surrealists, I consider the influence of [[Caillois]] on Lacan. In conclusion I describe the [[case]] of [[Aimee]], an early [[patient]] of Lacan's who was also a [[cause]] celebre for the surrealists.
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Lacan's [[discourse]] is deeply marked by his [[encounter]] with surrealism. Lacan's work, a storehouse of images, allusions and references to surrealism, cannot be fully [[understood]] without a [[knowledge]] of the aims and aspirations of the movement. As Bice Benvenuto has remarked, surrealism's overturning of the place of [[conscious]] [[reason]], its questioning of the reality of the [[object]], its cultivation of the absurd, and its emphasis on the omnipotence of desire, seem to have provided Lacan with many of his basic attitudes. 1
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The surrealist movement had great [[intellectual]] breadth and verve and it is difficult for us now fully to understand its original aura of excitement and revolt. Surrealism was a highly politicised, inflammatory movement which had a radical concept of [[freedom]].2 Its aim was [[nothing]] less than the liberation, in art and in life, of the resources of the unconscious [[mind]]. The surrealists' spiritual ancestors were de [[Sade]], Baudelaire, Rimbaud and Lautreamont. Deeply influenced by the lessons of [[Marx]] and Freud, surrealists, like Andre Breton, [[Paul]] Eluard, Louis Aragon and others, saw the new [[revolution]] occurring simultaneously on two fronts: the one
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17
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18 Jacques Lacan
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[[political]] and [[external]], the other exploring the deepest recesses of the [[human]] mind and unfolding its truths in the work of art.
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Why were the surrealists so interested in Freud? And why were these artists so interested in the exploration of the [[relationship]] between the conscious and the unconscious?
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The surrealists believed that the [[value]] of a work of art lay in the effort of the artist to encompass the [[whole]] psychophysical field of which the conscious mind represented only one small part. They thought of human experiences in the [[form]] of a pyramid, the narrow peak of which is the limited range of the conscious [[state]], and the broad base the [[full]], subterranean strata of the unconscious.3 Andre Breton, the [[theoretical]] [[leader]] of the movement, believed that the surrealists' [[search]] for an extra-empirical reality was within the traditions of Western thought, and he consistently demanded that the barriers which ignore the worlds of the [[primitive]], the [[child]] and the mad person be broken down.
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Surrealism inherited from Dada a hostility towards conventional definitions of art. For Breton, surrealism was not merely an artistic style; it was closer to [[being]] a [[transcendental]] world-view.4 Surrealism attempted to go beyond and above all forms of realism and to attain the realm of pure, unmediated thought and perception. This interest in the transcendental lies at the heart of the surrealists' subsequent enthusiasm for [[Hegel]], who was seen as a potential ally in transcending the contradictions of bourgeois [[order]].s The surrealists hoped for nothing less than the fusing of all the sources of human creativity - the dream, the unconscious, the conscious, the [[irrational]]- into a heightened reality that might alter the very shape of the world as well as men's and [[women]]'s understanding of that world.
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Freud published an essay in 1907 on Jensen's novel Gradiva.6 In subjecting the novel to the psychoanalytic method, Freud showed the economy of the unconscious, its relationship to conscious action, and the [[role]] played by dream in this nexus. This essay provided many of the themes of the surrealists: the [[mechanism]] of repression, the dynamism of the [[repressed]], the [[myth]] of [[love]] and the primacy of desire. One of Freud's conclusions was that both [[scientist]] and artist arrive ultimately at the same understanding of the unconscious; one proceeds through conscious observation of abnormal mental processes in others, the other directs his or her attention to his or her own unconscious and gives it artistic
  
This is an anti-commonsense realist view of science where [[scientific realism]] is false and the scientific phenomena is '''as if''' scientific realism were true. The first major (and trivial) demonstration of this interpretation of [[science]] is to [[Philip Henry Gosse]], a brilliant 19th Century [[natural history|naturalist]] and inventor for the first stable sea water [[aquarium]]. There was a serious problem reconciling biblical fundamentalism (e.g. the world was created in 4004 BC with the teachings of [[geology]] (the world is millions of years old). Gosse in his 1857 (2 years prior to [[Charles Darwin]]'s [[Origin of Species]]) book [[Omphalos: An Attempt to Untie the Geological Knot]] tries to reconcile these two dichotomies with a surrealist transform summed up nicely as '''God created the world AS IF the teachings of geology were true.''' Gosse's book was rejected by both ends of the debate. Surrealism however is a viable philosophical position for the [[antirealist]] interpretation of science. Gosse's problem was his solution to Geology and Biblical Fundamentalism was far to trivial a surrealist transform.
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The legacy of surrealism 19
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expression. The surrealists were quick to seize on Freud's conclusion that [[science]] and art confirm rather than contradict one [[another]] in their explication of the unconscious. They found in Freud's essay an [[explicit]] justification for their own attempt to determine the tortuous relationship between artistic expression and the unconscious.
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The surrealists were concerned with the replacing of the [[image]] derived from nature by that drawn from an interior [[model]]. The work of art was to [[exist]] not as an aesthetic end, but only as a means to the exploration and expression of an inner psychic reality. Surrealist work of the 1920s and 1930s relied, whether implicitly or explicitly, on the discoveries of Freud. The surrealists, preoccupied with the sources of creativity, probed the [[working]] of the unconscious through many means. These included automatism, collage, [[dream interpretation]], exploration of myth and the use of the [[paranoiac]]-critical method.
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Automatism, the practice of automatic writing, was one of the first techniques the surrealists used. This process became for them a form of [[self]]-administered psychoanalysis. Automatic writing consisted of writing down as rapidly as possible, without revision or [[control]] by the conscious, everything that has passed through the mind when the writer had been able to detach her- or himself sufficiently from the world [[outside]]. The possibility of applying the techniques of automatic writing to painting was envisaged at this time. They also studied [[hypnosis]] and mediumship and made transcripts of what trance [[subjects]] said. Experiments of this kind produced a sort of intoxicated exhilaration. Writing, painting and sculpture became aspects of one single [[activity]]: that of calling empirical 'reality' into question.  
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The surrealists often attempted to fuse the polarities of dream and reality, the unconscious and the conscious in a single image. They did this through the [[technique]] called collage (the sticking together of disparate elements to make a picture). Surrealists depended on the devices of [[condensation]], [[displacement]] and juxtaposition, to create a visual world analogous to but not reflecting any known perceptible reality. Max Ernst, for example, used old engravings and photo-mechanical reproductions as a means of violating conventional ideas about the [[rational]] [[structure]] of that same world. His figurative paintings, stripped of [[logical]] connections, remind one of the processes of the [[dream-work]].
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20 Jacques Lacan
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Although automatism and collage were the first 'Freudian' techniques used by the surrealists, Freud's major contribution to surrealism lay in his explication of the role of language in dream and dream interpretation. The [[formal]] structure of the dream - the condensation that results in a density of imagery, displacement of the senses of time and [[space]] and the importance of figurative language - is reconstituted in the works of the movement. The surrealists argued for a view of the relationship between dream and waking in which both states are perceived as fluid, their [[contents]] ceaselessly intermingled. They foresaw the ultimate [[achievement]] of dream study as the integration of the two states, in [[appearance]] so contradictory, of dream and reality into one sort of absolute reality which they called surreality.
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Like Freud, the surrealists were fascinated by mythological themes such as [[Oedipus]], [[Narcissus]] and others. In the area of surrealist painting, where there [[exists]] no single and [[identifiable]] surrealist 'style' and where the value of the work is determined almost exclusively on the basis of its [[content]], myth becomes one way of organising and synthesising surrealist beliefs within a recognisable set of [[symbols]].7 From their [[reading]] of Freud the surrealists realised that automatism, dream and myth all shared common characteristics: condensation, a displacement of the sense of time and space, a similar [[symbolism]]. Freud had viewed dreams as the residues of daily activity; myth as the collective heritage of centuries. For him the two modes of unconscious thought shared a symbolism that derived from their common origin in [[childhood]], whether individual or [[cultural]]. 8
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Another form of Freudian experimentation was the intentional simulation of states of mental abnormality. The most flamboyant and provocative exploitation of this technique was by Salvador Dali. Dali became fascinated by Millet's 'Angelus' and was quick to recognise that the work's universal appeal could not be fully eXplained by its overt content, two peasants bowing their heads as the Angelus peels from a distant tower. His earlier reading of Freud led Dali to an examination of the [[latent]] [[sexual]] content of a work which he saw as 'the most [[erotic]] picture ever painted, a masterpiece of disguised sexual repression'.9 When a visitor to the Louvre drove a [[hole]] through the canvas Dali became even more convinced of the work's disquieting quality. It was Jacques Lacan, a frequent contributor to Minotaure with articles on the
  
== Impact of Surrealism ==
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The legacy of surrealism 21
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relationship between paranoia and artistic creativity, who interviewed the vandal. Lacan's interest in such 'deviants' should not surprise us. He worked for a year in a [[clinic]] attached to the [[Prefecture de Police]], and his main task was to prepare psychiatric reports on criminals and vagrants.  
While Surrealism is typically associated with the arts, it has been said to transcend them; Surrealism has had an impact in many other fields. In this sense, Surrealism does not specifically refer only to self-identified "Surrealists", or those sanctioned by Breton, rather, it refers to a range of creative acts of revolt and efforts to liberate imagination.  
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Unable satisfactorily to explain the enigmatic aspects of 'The Angelus', Dali set about examining the painting in the light of the paranoiac-critical method which he had developed earlier. It was during the 1930s that Dali developed his 'paranoiac-critical' method, a process by which he deliberately induced [[psychotic]] [[hallucinatory]] states in ,himself for eXploitation in his art and life. We [[know]] that this practice caught the attention of Lacan, who subsequently visited Dali, whereupon Dali further developed his theory. 10
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Freud had used the [[psychoanalytical]] device of [[free association]] to trace the [[symbolic]] [[meaning]] of dream imagery to its source in the unconscious. Dali applied the same method to pictorial imagery, and particularly to that imagery which arises as a result of the visual [[hallucinations]] which Dali had exploited since childhood. By using the external world as the source and stimulus for the [[delusion]] and by rendering the hallucinatory results with the clarity and precision of Dutch seventeenth-century still-life, Dali hoped to destroy all [[belief]] in the idea of a [[stable]] external'reality without recourse to abstraction, which would violate the essentially figurative structure of mental images.
In addition to Surrealist ideas that are grounded in the ideas of [[Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel|Hegel]], [[Karl Marx|Marx]] and [[Sigmund Freud|Freud]], surrealism is seen by its advocates as being inherently dynamic and as dialectic in its thought. Surrealists have also drawn on sources as seemingly diverse as [[Clark Ashton Smith]], [[Montague Summers]], [[Fantomas]], [[The Residents]], [[Bugs Bunny]], [[comic strips]], the obscure poet [[Samuel Greenberg]] and the [[hobo]] writer and humourist [[T-Bone Slim]]. One might say that Surrealist strands may be found in movements such as [[Free Jazz]] ([[Don Cherry (jazz)|Don Cherry]], [[Sun Ra]], etc.) and even in the daily lives of people in confrontation with limiting social conditions. Thought of as the effort of humanity to liberate imagination as an act of insurrection against society, surrealism finds precedents in the [[alchemy|alchemists]], possibly [[Dante Alighieri|Dante]], [[Hieronymus Bosch]], [[Donatien Alphonse Francois de Sade|Marquis de Sade]], [[Charles Fourier]], [[Comte de Lautreamont]] and [[Arthur Rimbaud]].  
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Lacan's connection with the surrealists
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One of the main characteristics of surrealist work is the juxtaposition of images and objects far removed from one another. Breton borrowed Lautreamont's idea of beauty: 'Beautiful as the unexpected meeting, on a dissection table, of a sewing [[machine]] and an umbrella.' Breton's analysis of his dreams contributed to the imagery of the poetry. The [[experience]] of what the surrealists called 'convulsive beauty' (of something that shakes the [[subject]]'s selfpossession, bringing exultation through a kind of shock), is rather like Freud's notion of the [[uncanny]], where shock, mixed with the sudden appearance of fate, engulfs the subject.
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All this implies a definite break with a purely instrumental or
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22 Jacques Lacan
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representational view of language. For surrealist poets like Aragon, Breton and Eluard, language is not a nomenclature or a [[transparent]] medium. Meaning is seen as being produced through the juxtaposition of images and the clash of associations rather than as deriving from some [[ideal]] correspondence between [[sign]] and [[referent]].  
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One surrealist painter, Rene Magritte, quite consciously began to explore a theory of meaning, in the late 1920s, that was surprisingly close to contemporary [[linguistic]] theory. Many of his paintings are an investigation of the relationship between the process of depiction and the object depicted. His painting, 'Use of [[Speech]]', which depicts a smoking pipe and is inscribed with the [[words]] 'Ceci n 'est pas une pipe' (This is not a pipe), is a familiar one. This painting is, in part, a comment on the non-correspondence between the visual image and the object it represents. I I An image of a pipe is not a pipe. In other words, the relationship between [[signifier]], [[signified]] and referent is shown to be [[arbitrary]].
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I am mentioning all this because it will help us to understand not only Lacan's views on language but his own [[particular]] use of it. Lacan's style, with its puns and [[word]] games, is part of a highly [[self-conscious]] intellectual [[tradition]]. Just as Marcel Duchamp's 'ready-mades' challenged conventional assumptions about the nature of the art object, word play can be seen as a challenge to the notion that language is transparent. Many of Lacan's contemporaries such as Duchamp, Leiris, Queneau, were masters of glossological games.
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There are many references to surrealism in Lacan's [[Ecrits]].12 The frequency with which Lacan alludes to surrealism is all the more striking in that it is not a major reference for the post-war avant-garde. (Neither [[Barthes]], Sollers nor Kristeva has anything positive to say about it.) Of the forty or so French literary authors included in the [[name]] [[index]], more than half belonged to the surrealist group at one time or another, or were claimed by the surrealists as their forebears.
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Lacan has said that he felt a great personal connection with surrealist painting. In short, surrealism provides Lacan with a constant stock of allusions and illustrations, as when Magritte's window paintings are used in the 1962 [[seminar]] to illustrate the structure of [[phantasy]] (the idea that a phantasy is like a picture fitted into the opening of a window). 13
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There is also an indirect reference to surrealism in Lacan's com-
  
Surrealists believe that ''non-Western'' cultures also provide a continued source of inspiration for Surrealist activity because some may strike up a better balance between instrumental reason and the imagination in flight than Western culture. Surrealism has had an identifiable impact on radical and revolutionary politics, both directly -- as in some surrealists joining or allying themselves with radical political groups, movements and parties -- and indirectly -- through the way in which surrealists' emphasis on the intimate link between freeing the imagination and the mind and liberation from repressive and archaic social structures. This was especially visible in the [[New Left]] of the 1960s and 1970s and the French revolt of May 1968, whose slogan "All power to the imagination" arose directly from French surrealist thought and practice.
+
The legacy of surrealism 23
 +
ments on [[Hans]] [[Holbein]]'s painting '[[The Ambassadors]]' (1533), which is in the National Gallery, London. This work, one of the surrealists' favourite classical paintings, depicts two splendidly dressed men. In the foreground there is a strange, vaguely [[phallic]] object and, if one stands at a certain angle, one can see a skull appear, a continual reminder of the presence of death. This painting is a perfect example of the use of [[anamorphosis]] (a distorted image which will look normal if viewed from a certain angle or in a curved [[mirror]]) in painting.14 Lacan writes that 'Holbein makes [[visible]] for us something that is simply the subject nihilated', and suggests that Dali belongs to the same tradition as Holbein, and it is true that anamorphosis is an important feature of Dali's paintings. IS
 +
Besides being on close [[terms]] with Dali, the young Lacan associated with the group surrounding Breton. While Lacan was publishing clinical articles on [[neurology]] in medical journals he was also contributing to surrealist reviews; it was, in fact, in surrealist circles that his doctoral thesis on paranoia received its most enthusiastic welcome.
 +
It is an irony that psychoanalysis met with considerable and lasting [[resistance]] in French medical circles and that it was in the literary milieu that it found its first favourable reception. Some writers tried to absorb psychoanalysis into an established literary discourse by arguing that it could be fitted into a theory of literary [[introspection]]. For the surrealists, psychoanalysis had a very different function: it was a means with which to attack bourgeois values. They believed that the primary function of psychiatry was one of social repression. They agreed with the psychoanalytical view that the [[distinction]] between the normal and abnormal is not self-evident.
 +
The first issue of the surrealist journal Minotaure contains work by Dali and Lacan. It has been said that there are definite parallels between their [[thinking]] at this time (Dali met Lacan in 1933). Certain of Dali's [[double]] or multiple images might be illustrations of Lacan's views on the mirror [[phase]], and the [[narcissistic]] construction and function of the ego.16 (I will explain these ideas presently.)
 +
The ideas of Cail/ois
 +
Many important articles were published in Minotaure. We know that Lacan was greatly influenced by [[Roger Caillois]], a [[sociologist]]
 +
24 Jacques Lacan
 +
and avant-garde writer, who published two long essays in the above journal, the first on the praying mantis, the second on the phenomenon of [[mimicry]]. He wrote about how some animals, such as the praying mantis, stick insects and others, camouflage themselves. At that time it was generally held that this mimeticism was [[good]] for the creature and for the [[species]]. Caillois denies this; he argues that mimeticism is not good and he gives several arguments to illustrate why it is not successful. He writes about how these [[creatures]] subject themselves to the structure of an image, and how the structure to which they have to conform does not actually foster their survival. Indeed, it has a catastrophic effect on them.
 +
The [[female]] mantis's sexual practices - in certain species, its consumption of its mate after or even during copulation - and its voracity made it the perfect [[symbol]] of the phallic [[mother]], fascinating, petrifying, [[castrating]]. It is not surprising that the image of the praying mantis is found everywhere in the surrealist work of the period.17
 +
In his subsequent exploration of mimicry Caillois writes that the mantis comes stunningly to resemble a machine when, even decapitated, it can continue to function and thus to mime life:
 +
In the [[absence]] of all centres of representation and of voluntary action, it can walk, regain its [[balance]], have coitus, lay eggs, build a cocoon, and, what is most astonishing, in the face of [[danger]] can fall into a fake cadaverous immobility. I am expressing in this indir~t manner what language can scarcely picture, or reason assimilate, namely death. IS
 +
Most [[scientific]] explanations for [[animal]] mimicry relate it to adaptive [[behaviour]]. It is usually argued that the insect takes on the coloration, the shape, the patterning of its [[environment]] in order to [[fool]] either its predator or its prey. Caillois shows that the adaption hypothesis founders on two counts. First, the fusion of the insect with its environment can and often does work against survival, as when the animal is mistakenly eaten by its own kind or cannot be perceived by members of its species for purposes of mating. Second, this phenomenon, which functions exclusively in the realm of  
 +
.
 +
~the visual, is largely irrelevant to predators' hunting habits, which e a matter of smell and motion. In Caillois's view, mimicry is a fun tion of the visual experience of the insect itself.  
 +
Ty'ng mimicry to the animal's own perception of space, Caillois
  
Some [[artist]]s, such as [[H.R. Giger]] in [[Europe]], who won an [[Academy Awards|Academy Award]] for his stage set, and who also designed the "creature," in the movie ''[[Alien (movie)|Alien]],'' have been popularly called "Surrealists," though Giger is a [[Visionary art|visionary artist]] and he does not claim to be surrealist.
 
 
[[The Society for the Art of Imagination]] has come in for particularly bitter criticism from a self-labeled surrealist movement (although this criticism has been characterized by at least one anonymous individual as coming from "the Marxists [sic] Surrealist groups, who maintain small contingents worldwide;" he has also pointed out what he considers the hypocrisy of any Surrealist criticism of the Society for the Art of Imagination given that [[Kathleen Fox]] designed the cover of issue 4 of the bulletin of the [[Groupe de Paris du Mouvement Surrealiste]] and also participated in the [[2003]] Brave Destiny[http://wahcenter.net/exhibits/2003/surreal/index.html] show at the [[Williamsburg Art & Historical Center]]. Though some presented ''Brave Destiny'' as the largest-ever exhibit of Surrealist artists, the show was officially billed as exhibiting "Surrealism, Surreal/[[Conceptual art|Conceptual]], Visionary, [[Fantastic art|Fantastic]], [[Symbolism]], [[Magic Realism]], [[the Vienna School]], [[Neuve Invention]], [[Outsider art|Outsider]], [[Na?ve art|Na?ve]], [[the Macabre]], [[the Grotesque|Grotesque]] and [[Singulier Art]].)"
 
 
==Critiques of Surrealism==
 
 
Surrealism has been critiqued from several perspectives:
 
 
[[Freud]] initiated the psychoanalytic critique of surrealism with his remark that what interested him most about the surrealists was not their unconscious but their conscious. His meaning was that the manifestations of and experiments with psychic automatism highlighted by surrealists as the liberation of the unconscious were highly structured by ego activity, similar to the activities of the dream censorship in dreams, and that therefore it was in principle a mistake to regard surrealist poems and other art works as direct manifestations of the unconscious, when they were indeed highly shaped and processed by the ego. In this view, the surrealists may have been producing great works, but they were products of the conscious, not the unconscious mind, and they deceived themselves with regard to what they were doing with the unconscious. In psychoanalysis proper, the unconscious does not just express itself automatically but can only be uncovered through the analysis of resistance and transference in the psychoanalytic process.
 
  
[[Feminists]] have in the past critiqued the surrealist movement, claiming that it is fundamentally a male movement and a male fellowship. Despite the occasional few celebrated woman surrealist painters and poets. They believe that it adopts typical male attitudes toward women, such as worshipping them symbolically in stereotypical romantic but sexist ways, as representing higher values and truths, putting them on a pedestal, making them into objects of desire and of mystery.
 
  
==See also==
 
  
'''Techniques, games and humor'''
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The legacy of surrealism 25
*[[Surrealist games]]
+
hypothesises that the phenomenon is in fact a kind of insectoid [[psychosis]]. He argues that the life of any organism depends on the possibility of its maintaining its own distinctness, a boundary within which it is contained, the terms of what we could call its self-possession. Mimicry is the [[loss]] of this possession, because the animal that merges with its setting becomes dispossessed, derealised, as though yielding to a temptation exercised on it by the vast outsideness of space itself, a temptation to fusion. In case all this seems far-fetched, Callois reminds his readers of primitive sympathetic [[magic]] in which an [[illness]] is conceived of as a possession of the patient by some external force, one that dispossesses the [[victim]] of his or her own person, one that can be combated by drawing it off from the patient through the mimicry performed by a shaman in a [[rite]] of repossession.
*[[Surreal humour]]
+
Caillois's essay on mimicry had a great influence within the psychoanalytic circles developing in Paris in the 1930s.19 Lacan expressed his debt to Caillois, particularly in his working out of the concept of the [[mirror phase]].20 This phase refers to the [[moment]] when the child assumes an [[imaginary]] [[unity]] with its [[body]] image, in the way that some animals [[alienate]] their true nature, in mimetically hiding in their surroundings. It is the child's first encounter with its image in a mirror which results in a fictional selfprojection that influences subsequent [[identity]] [[formation]].
*[[Surrealist techniques]]
+
Lacan's theory of [[subjectivity]] - in his early work - is partly derived from Caillois. Caillois's main thesis is that the organism is constructed by forces and [[structures]] beyond the control of the subject. Influenced by Caillois's ideas about how some insects are [[captured]] by the image, Lacan argues that the human being, like the praying mantis, is captivated by the image. At the time Lacan was interested in narcissistic [[identification]] and he drew on Caillois's work to argue that we are dominated by a structure of images and that this has a toxic, poisonous effect on the human subject.
  
'''Related art movements and genres'''
 
*[[Cacophony Society]]
 
*[[Dada]]
 
*[[Fluxus]]
 
*[[Hysterical realism]] and [[Maximalism]]
 
*[[Post-Surrealism]]
 
*[[Situationism]]
 
*[[Ultra-Realism]]
 
*[[Visionary]]
 
*[[Non-Joke]]
 
==Sources==
 
 
'''[[André Breton]]'''
 
* André Breton, ''Manifestoes of Surrealism'' containing the 1<SUP>st</SUP>, 2<SUP>nd</SUP> and introduction to a possible 3<SUP>rd</SUP> Manifesto, and in addition the novel ''The Soluble Fish'' and political aspects of the Surrealist movement. ISBN 0472179004.
 
* ''What is Surrealism?: Selected Writings of André Breton''. ISBN 0873488229.
 
* André Breton, ''Conversations: The Autobiography of Surrealism'' (Gallimard [[1952]]) (Paragon House English rev. ed. [[1993]]). ISBN 1569249709.
 
* André Breton. ''The Abridged Dictionary of Surrealism'', reprinted in:
 
** Marguerite Bonnet, ed. ([[1988]]). ''Oeuvres complètes'', 1:328. Paris: Éditions Gallimard.
 
 
'''Other sources'''
 
* Guillaume Appollinaire ([[1917]], [[1991]]). Program note for ''Parade'', printed in ''Oeuvres en prose complètes'', 2:865-866, Pierre Caizergues and Michel Décaudin, eds. Paris: Éditions Gallimard.
 
* Gerard Durozoi, ''History of the Surrealist Movement'' (translated by Alison Anderson, University of Chicago Press). [[2004]]. ISBN 0226174115.
 
* Brotchie, Alastair and Gooding, Mel, eds. ''A Book of Surrealist Games'' Berkeley, CA: Shambhala ([[1995]]). ISBN 1570620849.
 
  
* Moebius, Stephan. ''Die Zauberlehrlinge. Soziologiegeschichte des [[Collège de Sociologie]]. Konstanz: UVK [[2006]]. (About the [[College of Sociology]], its members and sociological impacts).
+
==See Also==
*Maurice Nadeau, History of Surrealism (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press, 1989). ISBN 0674403452.
+
* [[André Breton]]
* Alexandrian, Sarane. ''Surrealist Art'' London: Thames & Hudson, [[1970]].
+
* [[Maryse Choisy]]
* Melly, George ''Paris and the Surrealists'' Thames & Hudson. [[1991]].
+
* [[René Held]]
* Lewis, Helena ''The Politics Of Surrealism'' [[1988]]
+
* [[Jacques-Marie Émile Lacan]]
* [[Mary Ann Caws|Caws, Mary Ann]] ''Surrealist Painters and Poets: An Anthology'' [[2001]] MIT Press
+
* [[Literature and psychoanalysis]]
  
==External links==
+
==References==
Academic resources/'Classical' Surrealism:
+
<references/>
*[http://www.tcf.ua.edu/Classes/Jbutler/T340/SurManifesto/ManifestoOfSurrealism.htm ''Manifesto of Surrealism'' by André Breton. 1924.]
+
# Biro, Adam, Passeron, René. (1982). Dictionnaire général du surréalisme et de ses environs. Freiberg, Switzerland: Office du Livre.
*{{fr icon}} [http://www.site-magister.com/surrealis.htm Surrealism]
+
# Breton, André. (1988). Œuvres complètes. Édition établie par Marguerite Bonnet. Paris: Gallimard, La Pléiade.
*[http://pers-www.wlv.ac.uk/~fa1871/whatsurr.html ''What is Surrealism?'' Lecture by Breton, Brussels 1934]
+
# [[Freud, Sigmund]]. (1927). Essais de psychanalys (Samuel Jankelevitch, Trans.). Paris: Payot.
*[http://www.madsci.org/~lynn/juju/surr/surrealism.html The Surrealism Server]
+
# ——. (1960a [1873-1939]). Letters of [[Sigmund Freud]], 1873-1939 (Ernst L. Freud, Ed.]]
*[http://pomaranczowa-alternatywa.republika.pl Happenings by the Orange Alternative]  
+
* [[Tania and James Stern, Trans.). London, Hogarth Press, 1970.
*[http://www.serbiansurrealism.com/ The Surrealist Movement in Serbia] +
 
*[http://www.libcom.org/history/articles/surrealism-politics/index.php The radical politics of Surrealism, 1919-1950] - an article looking at Surrealism and Surrealists' connections to anarchist, socialist and working class politics
 
* [http://www.gerard-bertrand.net/index.htm Franz Kafka and Marcel Proust, the 2 Albums], "recomposed photographs", in a rather surrealist spirit.
 
 
  
[[Category:Surrealism|Surrealism]]
+
[[Category:New]]
[[Category:Culture]]
 
[[Category:Lacan]]
 

Latest revision as of 00:09, 21 May 2019

Surrealism, however, offered the young Lacan an alternative route to psychoanalysis and the crucial link to his clinical practice in psychiatry.

The Surrealists fully embraced psychoanalysis and during his medical studies Lacan developed strong links with the movement.


Surrealism was a literary and artistic movement that emerged after the First World War in Paris, its founding figure the writer and poet André Breton (1896-1966).

Breton was familiar with Freud's work on dreams and developed a technique of 'spontaneous' writing to give free expression to unconscious thoughts and wishes.

Similarly, Surrealist painters such as Dali attempted to paint the 'reality' of their dreams, which they saw as more 'real' than the prosaic reality of our everyday world.


In 1932, and within this context, Lacan completed his doctoral thesis on Paranoid Psychosis and Its Relations to the Personality.

Around the same time he entered analysis with Rudolph Loewenstein, the SPP's most famous training analyst (a recognized psychoanalyst who is qualified to train other analysts within the Society).


During this time, Lacan's links with the Surrealists developed further.

He was a friend of André Breton and Salvador Dali, and was later to become the painter Pablo Picasso's (1881-1973) personal physician.

He attended the first public readings of James Joyce's (1882-1941) Ulysses in 1921 and was a well-known figure in the cafés and bookshops of Paris's Left Bank.

In 1933 Dali was to refer to Lacan's doctoral thesis in the first issue of the Surrealist review Minotaure and Lacan himself was to make many contributions to this and other Surrealist publications.

Lacan's doctoral thesis, then, was written in a largely anti-psychoanalytic culture and remained within established psychiatric categories and theories, but at the same time it drew on the alternative resources of the Surrealist movement.

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Begun as an investigation of poetic images and language, their sources, their nature, and specific features, surrealism is a movement of ideas, of artistic creation and action based explicitly on Freudian discoveries, which were used to develop an original theory of language and creativity. In later years it adopted Hegelian dialectics and Marxist-Leninist historical materialism. The "social and martial cataclysm" (Breton, 1934) provoked a revolt by an entire generation. The movement was founded in Paris in 1924 by French poet André Breton, with the support of a group of poets and painters. The presence of Max Ernst, from Germany, Man Ray, from the United States, and Joan Miró, a Catalan, gave the group its international flavor. Surrealism's goal was to "change life" (Arthur Rimbaud) by freeing humanity from the constraints of mental or social censorship as well as economic oppression: "Poetry is made by everyone. Not by one" (Lautréamont). The project made little sense to Freud, who refused his patronage (Freud to Breton, 1933e [1932]; to Zweig, July 20, 1938 (1960a [1873-1939])). Breton visited Freud in Vienna in 1921 and corresponded with him in 1932 about The Interpretation of Dreams. In 1937 he asked him to contribute to a planned anthology (Trajectoire du rêve, 1938). Freud answered: "A collection of dreams without their associations, without understanding the circumstances in which someone dreamed, doesn't mean anything to me, and I have a hard time understanding what it might mean to others" (Breton, 1938, I). These associations were generally omitted by the surrealists when they narrated their dreams. They appear in André Breton's The Communicating Vases (1932), but there the author, denying the "dream navel" for the sake of Marxist-Leninist materialism, felt he could use them to bring into focus all his dream thoughts. He claimed, contrary to Freud, that the dream was a creator, an instigator to action, and capable of dialectically resolving the contradiction between desire and reality. Surrealism ignored therapy. There are several periods to the history of surrealism. Its "prehistory" dates from 1916 (Breton discovers Freud) to 1924. This was the period of the review Littérature (1919). Together with Breton, a group of young artists invented surrealist techniques intended to liberate the unconscious: automatic writing and drawing, hypnotic sleep, hypnagogic visions, dream narratives, group creation, oral and written games, collage, rubbings, decals, experimental photography and theater. The publication of the first Surrealist Manifesto (Breton, 1924) ushered in Surrealism's formative period. The group had a journal of its own, La Révolution surréaliste. "We must be thankful for Freud's discoveries," wrote Breton, "the imagination may be on the point of winning back its rights." In 1927 André Breton, Louis Aragon, PaulÉluard, and Benjamin Peret joined the Communist Party. Breton did not, however, abandon Freud: "The Surrealism that, as we have seen, has adopted Marxist beliefs does not intend to treat lightly the Freudian critique of ideas" (Breton, 1930). Breton soon quit the Communist Party, which reproached him for his Freudianism. Surrealism embraced cinema (Luis Buñuel), the construction of objects ("Situation surréaliste de l'objet," Breton, 1935), and produced important works of art in every field. But in 1930, in his Second Manifesto of Surrealism, Breton acknowledged the existence of a profound crisis. The third period of Surrealism was about to begin. A new review was introduced, Le Surréalisme au service de la Révolution. In 1930 the review published two articles by the French-American psychoanalyst Jean FroisWittmann, in 1933 the Breton-Freud correspondence of 1932, a favorable critique of Jacques Lacan's doctoral dissertation by René Crevel, and, also by Crevel, an attack on an article in the Revue française de psychanalyse. The review also published the first texts by Salvador Dali, where he developed the idea of "critical-paranoia," the use of the interpretative processes of paranoia for creative ends, and the exploration of the unconscious. In 1933 Minotaure appeared. Although it was not the official voice of the group, it was strongly influenced by it. The first issue included articles on the "contributions of psychoanalysis." Lacan and Dalí explained their conceptions of paranoia as an active psychic phenomenon, which Dalí compared with the passivity he associated with dreams and automatic writing. Several large-scale international exhibitions confirmed the growth of surrealism around the world, a phenomenon that accelerated during the Second World War following the exile of Breton, André Masson, and Max Ernst in the United States, and Benjamin Péret in Mexico, and continued after the war. Breton, the principal theorist of the group, maintained a close association with Freudian thought throughout his career. He was most interested in the logic of the unconscious, in conflicts between the ego, the id, and the superego, relating them to the process of artistic creation, to Freudian ideas of sexuality, fantasy, desire, repression, the death instinct, whose opposition to Eros he assumed to be dialectical (Breton, 1930), and especially to ideas about representation and perception (Breton, 1933). Beginning with his concept of "pure mental representation," situated "beyond true perception," he examined, in the context of the Essais de psychanalyse (1927), how the transition from the unconscious to the perception-consciousness system takes place in the creative individual. For Breton, as a reader of Freud, it was at the preconscious level that language and the traces of acoustic and visual perceptions were united and charged with affect. But Breton went further: he saw in these preconscious elements the raw material of creation, obtained by the removal of repression with the help of automatic writing and drawing. In creating a work of art, the artist would make the individual universal (Breton, 1935). In a letter to Stefan Zweig, Freud, who had met Salvador Dalí in London, also associated the fundamental elements of the work of the artist with the preconscious, but he added a principle of economy: "From the critical point of view it could still be maintained that the notion of art defies expansion as long as the quantitative proportion of unconscious material and preconscious treatment does not remain within definite limits" (July 20, 1938). The specific task of the creative individual, the result of his "initiative" (Breton) is to manipulate the relation between unconscious and preconscious elements, and objectify them in a work of art. Repression would have to be removed using "surrealist techniques" (Breton). Freud's meeting with Dalí seems to be the only time when Freud made an effort to understand the surrealist use of psychoanalysis and compare it with his own beliefs. There were other points of contact between surrealism and psychoanalysis: Adrien Borel discussed his surrealist experiences (1925); Salvador Dalí and René Crevel interviewed Jacques Lacan; Crevel, Antonin Artaud, and Robert Desnos were analyzed by René Allendy, which they later wrote about. André Embiricos, a surrealist poet and theoretician as well as a psychoanalyst, founded, together with Marie Bonaparte, the Greek Psychoanalytic Society. Lacanian thought developed throughout the nineteen-sixties, and, although it has a number of affinities with surrealism, it has always remained distinct. In 1971 the surrealist painter and philosopher René Passeron, with his research team at the C.N.R.S., foundedÉtudes poïétiques, which analyzed the creative process and made use of Freudian theory. A number of psychoanalysts (André Berge, Jean-Bertrand Pontalis, Guy Rosolato) were interested in the surrealists. As Breton found in 1934, the scope of surrealism, through the upheaval of sensibility it entails, "is socially incalculable." As a movement it has frequently helped the spread of psychoanalysis.

more

The legacy of surrealism

I begin this chapter by explaining why the surrealists were so fascinated by Freud, and outline the ways in which they explored the workings of the unconscious through the use of various techniques. After suggesting some of Lacan's connections and convergences with the surrealists, I consider the influence of Caillois on Lacan. In conclusion I describe the case of Aimee, an early patient of Lacan's who was also a cause celebre for the surrealists. Lacan's discourse is deeply marked by his encounter with surrealism. Lacan's work, a storehouse of images, allusions and references to surrealism, cannot be fully understood without a knowledge of the aims and aspirations of the movement. As Bice Benvenuto has remarked, surrealism's overturning of the place of conscious reason, its questioning of the reality of the object, its cultivation of the absurd, and its emphasis on the omnipotence of desire, seem to have provided Lacan with many of his basic attitudes. 1 The surrealist movement had great intellectual breadth and verve and it is difficult for us now fully to understand its original aura of excitement and revolt. Surrealism was a highly politicised, inflammatory movement which had a radical concept of freedom.2 Its aim was nothing less than the liberation, in art and in life, of the resources of the unconscious mind. The surrealists' spiritual ancestors were de Sade, Baudelaire, Rimbaud and Lautreamont. Deeply influenced by the lessons of Marx and Freud, surrealists, like Andre Breton, Paul Eluard, Louis Aragon and others, saw the new revolution occurring simultaneously on two fronts: the one 17 18 Jacques Lacan political and external, the other exploring the deepest recesses of the human mind and unfolding its truths in the work of art. Why were the surrealists so interested in Freud? And why were these artists so interested in the exploration of the relationship between the conscious and the unconscious? The surrealists believed that the value of a work of art lay in the effort of the artist to encompass the whole psychophysical field of which the conscious mind represented only one small part. They thought of human experiences in the form of a pyramid, the narrow peak of which is the limited range of the conscious state, and the broad base the full, subterranean strata of the unconscious.3 Andre Breton, the theoretical leader of the movement, believed that the surrealists' search for an extra-empirical reality was within the traditions of Western thought, and he consistently demanded that the barriers which ignore the worlds of the primitive, the child and the mad person be broken down. Surrealism inherited from Dada a hostility towards conventional definitions of art. For Breton, surrealism was not merely an artistic style; it was closer to being a transcendental world-view.4 Surrealism attempted to go beyond and above all forms of realism and to attain the realm of pure, unmediated thought and perception. This interest in the transcendental lies at the heart of the surrealists' subsequent enthusiasm for Hegel, who was seen as a potential ally in transcending the contradictions of bourgeois order.s The surrealists hoped for nothing less than the fusing of all the sources of human creativity - the dream, the unconscious, the conscious, the irrational- into a heightened reality that might alter the very shape of the world as well as men's and women's understanding of that world. Freud published an essay in 1907 on Jensen's novel Gradiva.6 In subjecting the novel to the psychoanalytic method, Freud showed the economy of the unconscious, its relationship to conscious action, and the role played by dream in this nexus. This essay provided many of the themes of the surrealists: the mechanism of repression, the dynamism of the repressed, the myth of love and the primacy of desire. One of Freud's conclusions was that both scientist and artist arrive ultimately at the same understanding of the unconscious; one proceeds through conscious observation of abnormal mental processes in others, the other directs his or her attention to his or her own unconscious and gives it artistic

The legacy of surrealism 19 expression. The surrealists were quick to seize on Freud's conclusion that science and art confirm rather than contradict one another in their explication of the unconscious. They found in Freud's essay an explicit justification for their own attempt to determine the tortuous relationship between artistic expression and the unconscious. The surrealists were concerned with the replacing of the image derived from nature by that drawn from an interior model. The work of art was to exist not as an aesthetic end, but only as a means to the exploration and expression of an inner psychic reality. Surrealist work of the 1920s and 1930s relied, whether implicitly or explicitly, on the discoveries of Freud. The surrealists, preoccupied with the sources of creativity, probed the working of the unconscious through many means. These included automatism, collage, dream interpretation, exploration of myth and the use of the paranoiac-critical method. Automatism, the practice of automatic writing, was one of the first techniques the surrealists used. This process became for them a form of self-administered psychoanalysis. Automatic writing consisted of writing down as rapidly as possible, without revision or control by the conscious, everything that has passed through the mind when the writer had been able to detach her- or himself sufficiently from the world outside. The possibility of applying the techniques of automatic writing to painting was envisaged at this time. They also studied hypnosis and mediumship and made transcripts of what trance subjects said. Experiments of this kind produced a sort of intoxicated exhilaration. Writing, painting and sculpture became aspects of one single activity: that of calling empirical 'reality' into question. The surrealists often attempted to fuse the polarities of dream and reality, the unconscious and the conscious in a single image. They did this through the technique called collage (the sticking together of disparate elements to make a picture). Surrealists depended on the devices of condensation, displacement and juxtaposition, to create a visual world analogous to but not reflecting any known perceptible reality. Max Ernst, for example, used old engravings and photo-mechanical reproductions as a means of violating conventional ideas about the rational structure of that same world. His figurative paintings, stripped of logical connections, remind one of the processes of the dream-work. 20 Jacques Lacan Although automatism and collage were the first 'Freudian' techniques used by the surrealists, Freud's major contribution to surrealism lay in his explication of the role of language in dream and dream interpretation. The formal structure of the dream - the condensation that results in a density of imagery, displacement of the senses of time and space and the importance of figurative language - is reconstituted in the works of the movement. The surrealists argued for a view of the relationship between dream and waking in which both states are perceived as fluid, their contents ceaselessly intermingled. They foresaw the ultimate achievement of dream study as the integration of the two states, in appearance so contradictory, of dream and reality into one sort of absolute reality which they called surreality. Like Freud, the surrealists were fascinated by mythological themes such as Oedipus, Narcissus and others. In the area of surrealist painting, where there exists no single and identifiable surrealist 'style' and where the value of the work is determined almost exclusively on the basis of its content, myth becomes one way of organising and synthesising surrealist beliefs within a recognisable set of symbols.7 From their reading of Freud the surrealists realised that automatism, dream and myth all shared common characteristics: condensation, a displacement of the sense of time and space, a similar symbolism. Freud had viewed dreams as the residues of daily activity; myth as the collective heritage of centuries. For him the two modes of unconscious thought shared a symbolism that derived from their common origin in childhood, whether individual or cultural. 8 Another form of Freudian experimentation was the intentional simulation of states of mental abnormality. The most flamboyant and provocative exploitation of this technique was by Salvador Dali. Dali became fascinated by Millet's 'Angelus' and was quick to recognise that the work's universal appeal could not be fully eXplained by its overt content, two peasants bowing their heads as the Angelus peels from a distant tower. His earlier reading of Freud led Dali to an examination of the latent sexual content of a work which he saw as 'the most erotic picture ever painted, a masterpiece of disguised sexual repression'.9 When a visitor to the Louvre drove a hole through the canvas Dali became even more convinced of the work's disquieting quality. It was Jacques Lacan, a frequent contributor to Minotaure with articles on the

The legacy of surrealism 21 relationship between paranoia and artistic creativity, who interviewed the vandal. Lacan's interest in such 'deviants' should not surprise us. He worked for a year in a clinic attached to the Prefecture de Police, and his main task was to prepare psychiatric reports on criminals and vagrants. Unable satisfactorily to explain the enigmatic aspects of 'The Angelus', Dali set about examining the painting in the light of the paranoiac-critical method which he had developed earlier. It was during the 1930s that Dali developed his 'paranoiac-critical' method, a process by which he deliberately induced psychotic hallucinatory states in ,himself for eXploitation in his art and life. We know that this practice caught the attention of Lacan, who subsequently visited Dali, whereupon Dali further developed his theory. 10 Freud had used the psychoanalytical device of free association to trace the symbolic meaning of dream imagery to its source in the unconscious. Dali applied the same method to pictorial imagery, and particularly to that imagery which arises as a result of the visual hallucinations which Dali had exploited since childhood. By using the external world as the source and stimulus for the delusion and by rendering the hallucinatory results with the clarity and precision of Dutch seventeenth-century still-life, Dali hoped to destroy all belief in the idea of a stable external'reality without recourse to abstraction, which would violate the essentially figurative structure of mental images. Lacan's connection with the surrealists One of the main characteristics of surrealist work is the juxtaposition of images and objects far removed from one another. Breton borrowed Lautreamont's idea of beauty: 'Beautiful as the unexpected meeting, on a dissection table, of a sewing machine and an umbrella.' Breton's analysis of his dreams contributed to the imagery of the poetry. The experience of what the surrealists called 'convulsive beauty' (of something that shakes the subject's selfpossession, bringing exultation through a kind of shock), is rather like Freud's notion of the uncanny, where shock, mixed with the sudden appearance of fate, engulfs the subject. All this implies a definite break with a purely instrumental or 22 Jacques Lacan representational view of language. For surrealist poets like Aragon, Breton and Eluard, language is not a nomenclature or a transparent medium. Meaning is seen as being produced through the juxtaposition of images and the clash of associations rather than as deriving from some ideal correspondence between sign and referent. One surrealist painter, Rene Magritte, quite consciously began to explore a theory of meaning, in the late 1920s, that was surprisingly close to contemporary linguistic theory. Many of his paintings are an investigation of the relationship between the process of depiction and the object depicted. His painting, 'Use of Speech', which depicts a smoking pipe and is inscribed with the words 'Ceci n 'est pas une pipe' (This is not a pipe), is a familiar one. This painting is, in part, a comment on the non-correspondence between the visual image and the object it represents. I I An image of a pipe is not a pipe. In other words, the relationship between signifier, signified and referent is shown to be arbitrary. I am mentioning all this because it will help us to understand not only Lacan's views on language but his own particular use of it. Lacan's style, with its puns and word games, is part of a highly self-conscious intellectual tradition. Just as Marcel Duchamp's 'ready-mades' challenged conventional assumptions about the nature of the art object, word play can be seen as a challenge to the notion that language is transparent. Many of Lacan's contemporaries such as Duchamp, Leiris, Queneau, were masters of glossological games. There are many references to surrealism in Lacan's Ecrits.12 The frequency with which Lacan alludes to surrealism is all the more striking in that it is not a major reference for the post-war avant-garde. (Neither Barthes, Sollers nor Kristeva has anything positive to say about it.) Of the forty or so French literary authors included in the name index, more than half belonged to the surrealist group at one time or another, or were claimed by the surrealists as their forebears. Lacan has said that he felt a great personal connection with surrealist painting. In short, surrealism provides Lacan with a constant stock of allusions and illustrations, as when Magritte's window paintings are used in the 1962 seminar to illustrate the structure of phantasy (the idea that a phantasy is like a picture fitted into the opening of a window). 13 There is also an indirect reference to surrealism in Lacan's com-

The legacy of surrealism 23 ments on Hans Holbein's painting 'The Ambassadors' (1533), which is in the National Gallery, London. This work, one of the surrealists' favourite classical paintings, depicts two splendidly dressed men. In the foreground there is a strange, vaguely phallic object and, if one stands at a certain angle, one can see a skull appear, a continual reminder of the presence of death. This painting is a perfect example of the use of anamorphosis (a distorted image which will look normal if viewed from a certain angle or in a curved mirror) in painting.14 Lacan writes that 'Holbein makes visible for us something that is simply the subject nihilated', and suggests that Dali belongs to the same tradition as Holbein, and it is true that anamorphosis is an important feature of Dali's paintings. IS Besides being on close terms with Dali, the young Lacan associated with the group surrounding Breton. While Lacan was publishing clinical articles on neurology in medical journals he was also contributing to surrealist reviews; it was, in fact, in surrealist circles that his doctoral thesis on paranoia received its most enthusiastic welcome. It is an irony that psychoanalysis met with considerable and lasting resistance in French medical circles and that it was in the literary milieu that it found its first favourable reception. Some writers tried to absorb psychoanalysis into an established literary discourse by arguing that it could be fitted into a theory of literary introspection. For the surrealists, psychoanalysis had a very different function: it was a means with which to attack bourgeois values. They believed that the primary function of psychiatry was one of social repression. They agreed with the psychoanalytical view that the distinction between the normal and abnormal is not self-evident. The first issue of the surrealist journal Minotaure contains work by Dali and Lacan. It has been said that there are definite parallels between their thinking at this time (Dali met Lacan in 1933). Certain of Dali's double or multiple images might be illustrations of Lacan's views on the mirror phase, and the narcissistic construction and function of the ego.16 (I will explain these ideas presently.) The ideas of Cail/ois Many important articles were published in Minotaure. We know that Lacan was greatly influenced by Roger Caillois, a sociologist 24 Jacques Lacan and avant-garde writer, who published two long essays in the above journal, the first on the praying mantis, the second on the phenomenon of mimicry. He wrote about how some animals, such as the praying mantis, stick insects and others, camouflage themselves. At that time it was generally held that this mimeticism was good for the creature and for the species. Caillois denies this; he argues that mimeticism is not good and he gives several arguments to illustrate why it is not successful. He writes about how these creatures subject themselves to the structure of an image, and how the structure to which they have to conform does not actually foster their survival. Indeed, it has a catastrophic effect on them. The female mantis's sexual practices - in certain species, its consumption of its mate after or even during copulation - and its voracity made it the perfect symbol of the phallic mother, fascinating, petrifying, castrating. It is not surprising that the image of the praying mantis is found everywhere in the surrealist work of the period.17 In his subsequent exploration of mimicry Caillois writes that the mantis comes stunningly to resemble a machine when, even decapitated, it can continue to function and thus to mime life: In the absence of all centres of representation and of voluntary action, it can walk, regain its balance, have coitus, lay eggs, build a cocoon, and, what is most astonishing, in the face of danger can fall into a fake cadaverous immobility. I am expressing in this indir~t manner what language can scarcely picture, or reason assimilate, namely death. IS Most scientific explanations for animal mimicry relate it to adaptive behaviour. It is usually argued that the insect takes on the coloration, the shape, the patterning of its environment in order to fool either its predator or its prey. Caillois shows that the adaption hypothesis founders on two counts. First, the fusion of the insect with its environment can and often does work against survival, as when the animal is mistakenly eaten by its own kind or cannot be perceived by members of its species for purposes of mating. Second, this phenomenon, which functions exclusively in the realm of . ~the visual, is largely irrelevant to predators' hunting habits, which e a matter of smell and motion. In Caillois's view, mimicry is a fun tion of the visual experience of the insect itself. Ty'ng mimicry to the animal's own perception of space, Caillois



The legacy of surrealism 25 hypothesises that the phenomenon is in fact a kind of insectoid psychosis. He argues that the life of any organism depends on the possibility of its maintaining its own distinctness, a boundary within which it is contained, the terms of what we could call its self-possession. Mimicry is the loss of this possession, because the animal that merges with its setting becomes dispossessed, derealised, as though yielding to a temptation exercised on it by the vast outsideness of space itself, a temptation to fusion. In case all this seems far-fetched, Callois reminds his readers of primitive sympathetic magic in which an illness is conceived of as a possession of the patient by some external force, one that dispossesses the victim of his or her own person, one that can be combated by drawing it off from the patient through the mimicry performed by a shaman in a rite of repossession. Caillois's essay on mimicry had a great influence within the psychoanalytic circles developing in Paris in the 1930s.19 Lacan expressed his debt to Caillois, particularly in his working out of the concept of the mirror phase.20 This phase refers to the moment when the child assumes an imaginary unity with its body image, in the way that some animals alienate their true nature, in mimetically hiding in their surroundings. It is the child's first encounter with its image in a mirror which results in a fictional selfprojection that influences subsequent identity formation. Lacan's theory of subjectivity - in his early work - is partly derived from Caillois. Caillois's main thesis is that the organism is constructed by forces and structures beyond the control of the subject. Influenced by Caillois's ideas about how some insects are captured by the image, Lacan argues that the human being, like the praying mantis, is captivated by the image. At the time Lacan was interested in narcissistic identification and he drew on Caillois's work to argue that we are dominated by a structure of images and that this has a toxic, poisonous effect on the human subject.


See Also

References

  1. Biro, Adam, Passeron, René. (1982). Dictionnaire général du surréalisme et de ses environs. Freiberg, Switzerland: Office du Livre.
  2. Breton, André. (1988). Œuvres complètes. Édition établie par Marguerite Bonnet. Paris: Gallimard, La Pléiade.
  3. Freud, Sigmund. (1927). Essais de psychanalys (Samuel Jankelevitch, Trans.). Paris: Payot.
  4. ——. (1960a [1873-1939]). Letters of Sigmund Freud, 1873-1939 (Ernst L. Freud, Ed.]]
  • [[Tania and James Stern, Trans.). London, Hogarth Press, 1970.