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The fictions of Arthur Cravan

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The first comprehensive English-language account and critical reading of the legendary poet and boxer Arthur Cravan, a fleeting figure on the periphery of early twentieth-century European avant-gar...
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  • 30 January 2019
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The legendary poet and boxer Arthur Cravan, a fleeting figure on the periphery of early twentieth-century European avant-gardism, is frequently invoked as proto-Dada and Surrealist exemplar. Yet he remains an insubstantial phenomenon, not seen since 1918, lost through historical interstices, clouded in drifting untruths. This study processes philosophical positions into a practical recovery – from nineteenth-century Nietzsche to twentieth-century Deleuze – with thoughts on subjectivity, metaphor, representation and multiplicity. From fresh readings and new approaches – of Cravan’s first published work as a manifesto of simulation; of contributors to his Paris review Maintenant as impostures for the Delaunays; and of the conjuring of Cravan in Picabia’s elegiac film Entr’acteThe fictions of Arthur Cravan concludes with the absent poet-boxer’s eventual casting off into a Surrealist legacy, and his becoming what metaphor is: a means to represent the world.
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Price: £85.00
Pages: 336
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 30 January 2019
ISBN: 9781526133236
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Historical, LITERARY CRITICISM / Poetry, Literary studies: poetry and poets, Literary studies: from c 2000, History of art

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Dafydd W. Jones lectured in fine art and art history at Cardiff School of Art (1995–2012), and is currently the Editor of the University of Wales Press. He is the author of Dada 1916 in Theory: Practices of Critical Resistance and editor of the research volume Dada Culture: Critical Texts on the Avant-Garde.

Introduction
1 On the genealogy of Arthur Cravan
2 Enter Colossus
3 To be an American in Paris
4 ‘All words are lies’: Maintenant, April 1912–July 1913
5 ‘Life has no solution’: Maintenant, November 1913–April 1915
6 The vision of a struggling movement: Barcelona 1916
7 'Pure affect': New York 1917
8 Being as being, and nothing more
Conclusion
Index