ABSTRACT

The Dada movement, revered as perhaps the purest form of cultural subversion and provocation in 20th-century Europe, has been a victim of the readiness with which cultural historians have swallowed its own propaganda. Based on extensive close analysis of French-language Dada work in its original form, and offering English translations throughout, this major reappraisal looks at a broad range of media and topics - including poetry, film, philosophy, and quantum physics - in order to get beyond Dada's typecasting as avant-garde anti-hero. Work by women writers and other marginalized figures combines with that of canonical Dadaists to present Dada in a radically new set of guises: poetic and textually subtle; intellectually and philosophically meaningful; peaceable and quasi-Buddhist; and, perhaps most uncomfortably of all, conformist and reactionary.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

Down with Subversion

chapter 1|37 pages

Decoding Dada

Women Dada Poets and Homosocial Dada

chapter 2|31 pages

The Madman Next Door

Tristan Tzara and Jacques Lacan

chapter 3|27 pages

Being, Being Better, and the Importance of Nothingness

Dada, Buddhism, Living

chapter 4|28 pages

Uncertainty, on Principle

Dada, Science and Critical Theory

chapter |11 pages

Conclusion