Abstract
André Breton often insisted that surrealism was not a body of doctrines, or a definable idea, but an activity. The present essay is an exploration of ethnographic activity, set, as it must always be, in specific cultural and historical circumstances. I will be concentrating on ethnography and surrealism in France between the two world wars. To discuss these activities together—at times, indeed, to permit them to merge—is to question a number of common distinctions and unities.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,History
Reference85 articles.
1. Minotaure, no. 2 (1933))
2. Orientalism.
Cited by
207 articles.
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