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The Magnetic Fields, 1920

Part of the New York Review Books Poets series
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"In the spring of 1919, two young men, André Breton and Philippe Soupault, one a student of law and the other of medicine, both in a state of moral shock after the carnage of World War I, embarked on an experiment in writing.

Sick of the literary cultivation of an individual voice, sick of the "well-written," they wanted to unleash the power of the word as such, the better to create "a new morality" that would stand in place of "the prevailing morality, the source of all our trials and tribulations." They devised a plan.

They would write over the course of a week; they would write for only so much time on each day of the week; they would write fast and then faster.

When the week was over, the writing would be over, and they would not go back to it or clean it up in any way.

Finally, the project must proceed in perfect secrecy.

They must not tell anyone what they were up to. This was how The Magnetic Fields, the first sustained exercise

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Product Details
New York Review Books
1681374617 / 9781681374611
eBook (EPUB)
843.912
01/01/2020
English
128 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
DC Poetry