Synopses & Reviews
Demonstrates that Dali's Surrealism anticipates postmodern tactics, and inaugurates "New Dali Studies" by offering an original interpretation of his relationship with the Surrealist canon.
By taking Dali's "paranoiac-critical method" to the delirious extents Dali himself recommended, LaFountain demonstrates that Dali's Surrealism anticipates tactics practiced by postmodern and poststructural critics. In particular, LaFountain advances the notion that "phantom meaning" displaced Surrealisms "phantom object," thereby creating a crisis of the subject and the object far in excess of that sought by Surrealist revolutionaries. Focusing on Dali's magnificent painting, The Endless Enigma, LaFountain inaugurates "New Dali Studies" by offering an original interpretation of Dali's close, yet strained, relationship with Andre Breton and the Surrealist canon.
"The text itself transcends the personal/historical narrative of Dali and Breton and engages a debate that still rages about subjectivity, identity, agency, knowledge, autonomy, coherence, order, transformation and liberation, alterity, representation, abstraction, essences, and meaning. Connections made for instance between what Bataille and Blanchot are up to in their writings and what Dali is up to in his paintings open up new vistas in our understanding of both modernity and postmodernity. The lucid and energetic presentation of Dali as a posthumanist amid Surrealism's late modernist project reverberates within our present 'culture wars, ' foundationalists vs. antifoundationalists, essentialists vs. anti-essentialists. This is very much a re-reading that makes no pretenses regarding its present world connections." -- Joseph Natoli, Michigan State University
."..This discussion is interesting for its own sake, and the author also extends it to clarify Dali's position in the controversies surrounding the history of Surrealism -- his relation to Bretons version of Surrealism, Bataille, et al." -- Gregory L. Ulmer, University of Florida5
Synopsis
By taking Dali s paranoiac-critical method to the delirious extents Dali himself recommended, LaFountain demonstrates that Dali s Surrealism anticipates tactics practiced by postmodern and poststructural critics. In particular, LaFountain advances the notion that phantom meaning displaced Surrealism s phantom object, thereby creating a crisis of the subject and the object far in excess of that sought by Surrealist revolutionaries. Focusing on Dali s magnificent painting, Endless Enigma, LaFountain inaugurates New Dali Studies by offering an original interpretation of Dali s close, yet strained, relationship with Andre Breton and the Surrealist canon."
Synopsis
Marc J. LaFountain is Professor, Department of Sociology, State University of West Georgia. He is a four-time recipient of National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Seminar stipends.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [149]-168) and index.