Surrealism and Philosophy - Part I


I was asked to write a brief piece on the relationship of surrealism to philosophy. For anybody trying to understand these links, the most immediate problem is that the only book in English suitably titled “Surrealism and Philosophy”, has not been in print for many years. Once, however, you acquire a copy there is another problem, the author, Ferdinand Alquie, ignores the actual theoretical preoccupations of the surrealists and constructs a platonic model of surrealist theory instead! Admittedly it is difficult to avoid Plato and his influence once one starts to deal with philosophy in any way, but I have to suggest that in order to understand what the early surrealists were thinking, and how this affects the movement today, it is necessary to come to terms with what the surrealists actually thought and read rather than to project upon them whatever fantasies or ideological preconceptions one might have. I have decided, given the constraints of the newsletter, to break down my account into 3 parts. The first of which will deal briefly with the manifestos of Surrealism which must be the starting point for any decent account of the subject.

The Manifestos are certainly a product of their time, but nevertheless they do manage to articulate the principles of surrealism as it emerges, grows and develops. So, in the Manifesto of Surrealism (1924), André Breton defines surrealism as: Dictionary: Surrealism, n. Pure psychic automatism, by which one proposes to express, either verbally, in writing, or by any other manner, the real functioning of thought. Dictation of thought in the absence of all control exercised by reason, outside of all aesthetic and moral preoccupation.” (Breton, André: Manifestoes of Surrealism)

This early preoccupation with automatism was indeed the focus of surrealism in the early days, but its value has often been doubted and questioned by some surrealists. It was partly inspired by Freudian free-association, but should not be confused with it. This kind of automatism emerged from experiments made by Breton and Phillipe Soupault when they created a collaborative text which became the first surrealist book Le Champs Magnetique, or Magnetic Fields (1919).

Over the next few years the surrealist vision developed rapidly, even as the movement spread to several other countries, Belgium, Yugoslavia and Romania among others. By 1929, during a major crisis in the movement, and with a number of people leaving the movement and joining the circle around Georges Bataille, Breton felt the necessity to restate the position of surrealism in the Second Manifesto of Surrealism (1929): “Everything tends to make us believe that there exists a certain point of the mind at which life and death, the real and the imagined, past and future, the communicable and the incommunicable, high and low, cease to be perceived as contradictions. Now, search as one may one will never find any other motivating force in the activities of the Surrealists than the hope of finding and fixing this point. From this it becomes obvious how absurd it would be to define Surrealism solely as constructive or destructive: the point to which we are referring is a fortiori that point where construction and destruction can no longer be brandished one against the other. It is also clear that Surrealism is not interested in giving very serious consideration to anything that happens outside of itself, under the guise of art, or even anti-art, of philosophy or anti-philosophy — in short, at anything not aimed at the annihilation of the being into a diamond, all blind and interior, which is no more the soul of ice than that of fire.”

This text shows Breton’s interest in the dialectics of Hegel. There has been some argument as to how much he understood Hegel, at least at this time, but I don’t think Breton is simply trying to reproduce Hegel’s ideas, but use the notion of a dialectical overcoming in order to arrive at this state beyond contradictions. Breton had already stated that “beauty shall be convulsive or it shall not exist” and was later to develop this poetically as “Beauty shall be convulsive-fixed, magic-circumstantial, erotic-veiled”. Each phrase locks together antithetical and antagonistic images that become something greater than the parts. The poetic and intellectual origin of this is Lautréamont’s Le Chants de Maldoror, and the famous phrase “as beautiful as the chance meeting upon an operating table between an umbrella and a sewing machine”. Effectively, these “convulsive-fixed” images undo binary logic and allow the mind access to new ways of thought. It is almost incidental that they should be expressed as a painting, drawing or poem. It could equally be expressed by action in the street.

In the next part want to go a bit further into the notion of convulsive beauty and also the surrealist engagement with politics. In the third part I shall focus on the principle of poetic analogy. Apologies for dodgy citations, but this was written off the top of my head, without my usual books to hand!
  
By Stuart Inman

Real motives - by St.Zagarus the damned


Real motives


You think that because you entertain the possibility that you are imbibing intellectual poison that this somehow vindicates you of any chance of being wrong - token resistance! You search for arguments to undermine your position, you appear modest, but this is just to fool yourself into thinking your position is not dogmatic.


What exactly are your real motives for believing in a "better" world? Dare to find them if you will: Guilt, weakness, fear - these things colour your utopian discourse. Guilt for being born on the right side of the tracks. Weakness for not being able to compete with the new aristocracy. Fear of admitting that you could have succeeded in the cruel vortex that is society.


Stop and consider your real motives, ere you preach to others. Fools!


St.Zagarus the damned

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