The Feminization of Surrealism
The Road to Surreal Silence in Selected Works of Marguerite Duras
©2001
Monographs
X,
158 Pages
Series:
Francophone Cultures and Literatures, Volume 31
Summary
Marguerite Duras’s writing is analogous to the surrealist endeavor, though her work is rarely compared to surrealist principles. This study proposes a detailed analysis of Duras’s relationship to the male-dominated literary domain of Surrealism, founded in France in 1924 by André Breton. Such an approach allows a greater understanding of her work and broadens the realm of surrealist aesthetics to include the female experience. With Duras’s final text C’est tout in mind, this book suggests a reevaluation of the Durassian corpus based on a comparison of the ultimate silence of her texts to the surrealist ideal of the marvelous. This study shows how Duras’s work encourages a reexamination of the surrealist movement to encompass the feminine unconscious, which finds its place in the realm of silence.
Details
- Pages
- X, 158
- Publication Year
- 2001
- ISBN (Hardcover)
- 9780820449517
- Language
- English
- Keywords
- Surrealism feminine unconscious Marvelousness
- Published
- New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., Oxford, Wien, 2001. X, 158 pp.
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