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Poetry of the Revolution : Marx, Manifestos, and the Avant-Gardes

Part of the Translation/Transnation series
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"Poetry of the Revolution" tells the story of political and artistic upheavals through the manifestos of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Ranging from the "Communist Manifesto" to the manifestos of the 1960s and beyond, it highlights the varied alliances and rivalries between socialism and repeated waves of avant-garde art.

Martin Puchner argues that the manifesto - what Marx called the "poetry" of the revolution - was the genre through which modern culture articulated its revolutionary ambitions and desires.

When it intruded into the sphere of art, the manifesto created an art in its own image: shrill and aggressive, political and polemical.

The result was "manifesto art" - combinations of manifesto and art that fundamentally transformed the artistic landscape of the twentieth century.

Central to modern politics and art, the manifesto also measures the geography of modernity.

The translations, editions, and adaptations of such texts as the "Communist Manifesto" and the "Futurist Manifesto" registered and advanced the spread of revolutionary modernity and of avant-garde movements across Europe and to the Americas.The rapid diffusion of these manifestos was made "possible by networks - such as the successive socialist internationals and international avant-garde movements - that connected Santiago and Zurich, Moscow and New York, London and Mexico City. "Poetry of the Revolution" thus provides the point of departure for a truly global analysis of modernism and modernity.

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Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691122598 / 9780691122595
Hardback
11/12/2005
United States
English
320 p. : ill.
23 cm
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From Marx and Engels' Communist Manifesto down to the avant-garde theatre of the present, the manifesto is, as Martin Puchner demonstrates in this dazzling, brilliantly original, and deeply learned book, 'an act of self-foundation and self-creation,' unique in its exhortation to action, not by means of lofty principles but through its artistic form. In its fusion of the political and the poetic as they coexist in twentieth-century movements from Futurism to Situationism, Poetry of the Revolution is one of the few indispensable studies of the avant-garde. In a very crowded field, it stands out,
From Marx and Engels' Communist Manifesto down to the avant-garde theatre of the present, the manifesto is, as Martin Puchner demonstrates in this dazzling, brilliantly original, and deeply learned book, 'an act of self-foundation and self-creation,' unique in its exhortation to action, not by means of lofty principles but through its artistic form. In its fusion of the political and the poetic as they coexist in twentieth-century movements from Futurism to Situationism, Poetry of the Revolution is one of the few indispensable studies of the avant-garde. In a very crowded field, it stands out, 3JJ 20th century, DN Prose: non-fiction, JPA Political science & theory