The Central Laboratory

Autor Max Jacob

The Central Laboratory - Max Jacob Nedostupné

Kniha ( měkká vazba )

    • Produkt je nedostupný.
E-shopové listy

Při zaslání zboží balíčkem

K nákupu nad 99 Kč dárek zdarma v hodnotě 19 Kč

E-shopové listy

Gump: Jsme dvojka

Při zaslání zboží balíčkem

K nákupu nad 499 Kč dárek zdarma v hodnotě 299 Kč

Gump: Jsme dvojka

The first English translation of the Cubist poet’s most important collection of verse poems—a wild grab bag of contradictory stylesWhen Max Jacob published The Central Laboratory in 1921, Parisian Dada had just officially come to an end and Surrealism was yet to be born. The poetic scene in Paris was between definitions, and Jacob embodied… Přejít na celý popis

Popis

The first English translation of the Cubist poet’s most important collection of verse poems—a wild grab bag of contradictory styles

When Max Jacob published The Central Laboratory in 1921, Parisian Dada had just officially come to an end and Surrealism was yet to be born. The poetic scene in Paris was between definitions, and Jacob embodied that moment.The Central Laboratory is distinctly modern, yet utterly discordant with anything else that had been published before: a grab bag of popular genres, operettas, Breton folk song, nonsense poetry, nursery rhyme, doggerel, parody and puns in which sound often trumps sense and Jacob changes register on a dime. Employing Symbolist obscure reference, Cubist fracturing of perspective and Dadaist discontinuity, Jacob’s art of mixed signals and mocked allegory formulates a camp sensibility, a “queering” of literary style as riddled with contradiction as Jacob himself had been in his lifetime.A century after its initial publication in French, the book remains utterly peculiar and lost for too long in the shadow of Jacob’s more famous book of prose poems, The Dice Cup. Jacob himself said of The Central Laboratory: “it sums up 20 years and reflects 20 states of soul, often 20 styles either suffered or created by me.”Max Jacob (1876–1944) was a French poet, painter, writer and critic. A key figure of bohemian Montmartre and the Cubist era, he rubbed shoulders with such figures as Apollinaire and Modigliani, and was a lifelong friend to Picasso, Gris and Cocteau. Jacob converted from Judaism to Christianity in 1915. Arrested by the Gestapo in 1944, he died in a deportation camp of pneumonia. Rosanna Warren''s critically acclaimed biography of Jacob was published in 2020.

Sdílet

Nakladatel
Wakefield Press
Rozměr
209 x 138 x 27
jazyk
angličtina
Vazba
měkká vazba
Hmotnost
476 g
isbn
978-1-939663-80-1
Počet stran
360
datum vydání
8.09.2022
ean
9781939663801

Hodnocení a recenze čtenářů Nápověda

0.0 z 5 0 hodnocení čtenářů

5 hvězdiček 4 hvězdičky 3 hvězdičky 2 hvězdičky 1 hvezdička

Přidejte své hodnocení knihy

Vývoj ceny

Vývoj ceny Nápověda

Získejte přehled o vývoji ceny za posledních 60 dní.

Maloobchodní cena Minimální prodejní cena: 0 Kč Nápověda