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The Edge of Surrealism: A Roger Caillois Reader
Paperback

The Edge of Surrealism: A Roger Caillois Reader

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The Edge of Surrealism is an introduction to the writing of French social theorist Roger Caillois (1913-1978). Though his subjects were diverse, Caillois focused on issues crucial to modern intellectual life, and his essays offer a perspective on many of 20th-century France’s most significant intellectual movements and figures. Including an introductory essay by Claudine Frank situating his work in relation to his life and intellectual milieu, this anthology is the first comprehensive introduction to Caillois’s work to appear in any language. A part of the Surrealist avant garde, in the 1930s Caillois founded the College of Sociology with Georges Bataille and Michel Leiris. Caillois spent the remainder of his life exploring issues raised by this famous group. During World War II he lived in Buenos Aires and edited the journal Les Lettres Francaises. In the postwar period, he resisted dominant intellectual trends including existentialism and Marxism, and pursued his own interests, writing on a variety of topics, including politics, poetics, sociology, games, the fantastic, and, ultimately, designs in nature and on stones. He sought to compete with Bataille’s journal Critique through the renewed humanism of his own journal, Diogene, and to challenge structuralist theory through his concept of diagonal science. In 1972, Caillois was inducted into the Academie Francaise. Arranged chronologically, these 32 essays with commentaries strike a balance between Caillois’s political and theoretical writings and between his better known works, such as the popular essays on the praying mantis, myth, and mimicry and his lesser known pieces. Presenting several new documents and drawing on interviews and unpublished correspondence, this book reveals Caillois’s consistent effort to reconcile intellectual rigor and imaginative adventure. Perhaps most importantly, The Edge of Surrealism provides an overdue look at how Caillois’s intellectual project intersected with the work of Georges Bataille and others including Breton, Bachelard, Benjamin, Lacan, and Levi-Strauss.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Duke University Press
Country
United States
Date
8 July 2003
Pages
440
ISBN
9780822330684

The Edge of Surrealism is an introduction to the writing of French social theorist Roger Caillois (1913-1978). Though his subjects were diverse, Caillois focused on issues crucial to modern intellectual life, and his essays offer a perspective on many of 20th-century France’s most significant intellectual movements and figures. Including an introductory essay by Claudine Frank situating his work in relation to his life and intellectual milieu, this anthology is the first comprehensive introduction to Caillois’s work to appear in any language. A part of the Surrealist avant garde, in the 1930s Caillois founded the College of Sociology with Georges Bataille and Michel Leiris. Caillois spent the remainder of his life exploring issues raised by this famous group. During World War II he lived in Buenos Aires and edited the journal Les Lettres Francaises. In the postwar period, he resisted dominant intellectual trends including existentialism and Marxism, and pursued his own interests, writing on a variety of topics, including politics, poetics, sociology, games, the fantastic, and, ultimately, designs in nature and on stones. He sought to compete with Bataille’s journal Critique through the renewed humanism of his own journal, Diogene, and to challenge structuralist theory through his concept of diagonal science. In 1972, Caillois was inducted into the Academie Francaise. Arranged chronologically, these 32 essays with commentaries strike a balance between Caillois’s political and theoretical writings and between his better known works, such as the popular essays on the praying mantis, myth, and mimicry and his lesser known pieces. Presenting several new documents and drawing on interviews and unpublished correspondence, this book reveals Caillois’s consistent effort to reconcile intellectual rigor and imaginative adventure. Perhaps most importantly, The Edge of Surrealism provides an overdue look at how Caillois’s intellectual project intersected with the work of Georges Bataille and others including Breton, Bachelard, Benjamin, Lacan, and Levi-Strauss.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Duke University Press
Country
United States
Date
8 July 2003
Pages
440
ISBN
9780822330684