Magnetic Fields by Andre Breton - ISBN: 9781681374604
Paperback
Surrealism’s birth: automatic writing unleashes a new morality in poetry.

$36.42

  • Paperback

    128 pages

  • Release Date

    15 December 2020

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Summary

An indispensable classic of French poetry, this is a new translation of Breton and Soupault’s experiment with automatic writing, also the first known work of literary Surrealism.

In the spring of 1919, two young men, Andre Breton and Philippe Soupault, both in a state of shock after World War I, embarked on an experiment. Sick of the literary cultivation of “voice,” sick of the “well-written,” they wanted to unleash the power of the word and to create “a new morality” to replace “the …

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781681374604
ISBN-10:1681374609
Author:Andre Breton, Philippe Soupault
Publisher:New York Review Books
Imprint:NYRB Poets
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:128
Release Date:15 December 2020
Weight:369g
Dimensions:178mm x 114mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

“With distance, a sort of unity has established itself, and The Magnetic Fields have become the work of a single author with two heads. This double gaze has made it possible, as nothing else would, for Philippe Soupault and André Breton to push forward on the path where no one had preceded them, into these shadows where they were both speaking aloud.” —Louis Aragon

“Fantastic, disconnected but vivid and poetic as though Breton and Soupault were seeing sea life at the bottom of the ocean’s floor: very few of us have the intensity of spirit to live with that sense of life.” —Kimberly Lyons

“The Magnetic Fields opened the verbal floodgates for the writers aligned first with Dada and then with Surrealism: Breton, Soupault, Paul Eluard, Louis Aragon, Robert Desnos, Benjamin Peret.” —Christopher Merrill, Los Angeles Times

“Breton and Soupault ushered a freshly new phenomenon of writing into being. Theirs remains the key 20th century collaboration… Going forward there was acknowledged precedent for the validity of jointly recording words onto the page as they come, whether borrowed, imagined or otherwise summoned forth from whatever depths.” —Patrick James Dunagan, Periodicities

About The Author

Andre Breton

Andre Breton (1896-1966) was a writer, poet, and co-founder of the surrealist movement. A student of psychiatry and a devout Marxist, Breton saw surrealism as the ultimate means to liberation both personal and political.

Philippe Soupault (1897-1990) was a co-founder of the surrealist movement alongside Andre Breton. Soupault left surrealism behind following political disagreements with Breton, remaining a lifelong writer.

Charlotte Mandell is a translator of French literature. She has published numerous translations of writers including Jean Genet, Guy de Maupassant, and Gustave Flaubert. She has been awarded a translation prize from the Modern Language Association and the National Translation Award in Prose. She lives in the Hudson Valley of New York.

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