Image for Refusal of the shadow  : surrealism and the Caribbean

Refusal of the shadow : surrealism and the Caribbean

See all formats and editions

In 1932, at the very peak of French colonialism, a group of Martiniquan students at the Sorbonne in Paris established a Caribbean Surrealist Group, and published a single issue of a journal called "Legitime Defense".Immediately banned by the authorities, it passed almost unnoticed at the time.

Yet, its publication began a remarkable series of debates and collaborations between surrealism and Caribbean intellectuals that had a profound impact on the struggle for cultural identity.

In the next two decades, these exchanges greatly influenced the evolution of the concept of negritude, initiated revolution in Haiti in 1946, and crucially affected the development of surrealism itself.This book explores the nature of this relationship between black anti-colonialist movements in the Caribbean and the most radical of the European avant-gardes, and presents a series of key texts which reveal its complexity - most of them never before translated into English.

Included are: Rene Menil's subtle philosophical essays and the fierce polemics of Aime and Suzanne Cesaire that had a great influence on Franz Fanon, appreciations of surrealism by Haitian writers, lyrical evocations of the Caribbean by Andre Breton and andre Masson, and explorations of Haiti and voodoo religion by Pierre Mabille and Michel Leiris.This collection illuminates a neglected moment in cultural and political history.

Michael Richardson is the author of "Georges Bataille", and editor and translator of "The Absence of Myth".

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£44.95
Product Details
Verso
1859849970 / 9781859849972
Hardback
24/05/1996
England
English
256p.
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More