Showing posts with label download. Show all posts
Showing posts with label download. Show all posts

Tuesday, 12 July 2016

Download All 8 Issues of Dada, the Arts Journal That Publicized the Avant-Garde Movement a Century Ago (1917-21)

http://www.openculture.com/2016/07/download-all-8-issues-of-dada.html

Download All 8 Issues of Dada, the Arts Journal That Publicized the Avant-Garde Movement a Century Ago (1917-21)

Dada_1_Jul_1917
Surrealism, Discordianism, Frank Zappa, Situationism, punk rock, the Residents, Devo… the anarchists of counterculture in all their various guises may never have come into being—or into the being they did—were it not for an anti-art movement that called itself Dada. And like many of those anarchist countercultural movements and artists, Dada came about not as a playful experiment in “disrupting” the art world for fun and profit—to use the current jargon—but as a politically-charged response to rationalized violence and complacent banality. In this case, as a response to European culture’s descent into the mass-murder of World War One, and to the domestication of the avant-garde’s many proliferating isms.
Dada_2_Dec_1917
The explicit tenets of Dada, in their intentionally scrambled way, were ecumenical, international, anti-elitist, and concerned with questions of craft. “The hospitality of the Swiss is something to be profoundly appreciated,” wrote poet Hugo Ball in his 1916 Dada manifesto, “And in questions of aesthetics the key is quality.” Ball conceived Dada as a means of reaching back toward primal origins, “to show how articulated language comes into being…. I shall be reading poems that are meant to dispense with conventional language, no less, and to have done with it.” Risking a lapse into solipsism, Ball sneered at “The word, the word, the word outside your domain, your stuffiness, this laughable impotence, your stupendous smugness, outside all the parrotry of your self-evident limitedness.” And yet, he concluded, “The word, gentlemen, is a public concern of the first importance.”
Dada_7_Mar_1920
Two years later, artist Tristan Tzara issued a more bilious Dada manifestowith similar intent: “a need for independence… a distrust toward unity.” At once intensely political and anti-theoretical, he wrote, “Those who are with us preserve their freedom…. Here we are dropping our anchor in fertile ground.” How right he was, we can say 100 years later. “However short-lived,” writes Corinna da Fonseca-Wollheim in a New York Timescelebration of Dada’s 100th anniversary, “Dada constitutes something like the Big Bang of Modernism.” Both Ball and Tzara positioned Dada as a collective, international movement. As such, it needed a publication to both centralize and spread its anti-establishment messages: thus Dada, the arts journal, first published in 1917 and printing 8 issues in Zurich and Paris until 1921.
Dada_3_Dec_1918
Edited by Tzara and including his manifesto in issue 3, the magazine “served to distinguish and define Dada in the many cities it infiltrated,”writes the Art Institute of Chicago, “and allowed its major figures to assert their power and position.” Dada succeeded a previous attempt by Ball at a journal called Cabaret Voltaire—named for his Zurich theater—which survived for one issue in 1917 before folding, along with the first version of the cabaret. That year, Tzara, “an ambitious and skilled promoter… began a relentless campaign to spread the ideas of Dada…. As Dada gained momentum, Tzara took on the role of a prophet by bombarding French and Italian artists and writers with letters about Dada’s activities.” Whatever Dada was, it wasn’t shy about promoting itself.
Janco Dada
The first issue (cover at the top), contained commentary and poetry in French and Italian, and artwork like that above by important Romanian Dada artist, architect, and theorist Marcel Janco. Issues 4 and 5 were published together as an anthology, then World War I ended, and with travel again possible, Tzara, several Dada compatriots, and the journal moved to Paris. The final issue, Number 8, appeared in a truncated form. You can download each issue as a PDF from Monoskop or from Princeton University’s Blue Mountain Project, which also has an online viewer that allows you to preview each page before downloading.
Dada_4-5_May_1919
Ball and Tzara were not the only assertive disseminators of Dada’s art and aims. The Art Institute of Chicago notes that in Berlin a “highly aggressive and politically involved Dada group” published its own short-lived journal, Der Dada, from 1919-1920. Download all three issues of that publication from the University of Iowa here.
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Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness

Sunday, 14 September 2014

100 cuentos de Julio Cortázar y Jorge Luis Borges

http://culturacolectiva.com/100-cuentos-de-julio-cortazar-y-jorge-luis-borges/

100 cuentos de Julio Cortázar y Jorge Luis Borges

- See more at: http://culturacolectiva.com/100-cuentos-de-julio-cortazar-y-jorge-luis-borges/#sthash.BcMaMdZA.dpuf



Según el argentino, basta preguntarse por qué un determinado cuento es malo. No es malo por el tema, porque en literatura no hay temas buenos ni temas malos, hay solamente un buen o un mal tratamiento del tema. Tampoco es malo porque los personajes carecen de interés, ya que hasta una piedra es interesante cuando de ella se ocupan un Henry James o un Franz Kafka.
Uno de los mejores cuentistas latinoamericanos y, además, uno de los máximos exponentes del Boom Latinoamericano, dijo sobre el cuento casi todo lo que los narradores contemporáneos definen como tal, fue él uno de los grandes cimientos del relato corto contemporáneo y comparaba al cuento con una esfera; es algo, decía, que tiene un ciclo perfecto e implacable; algo que empieza y termina satisfactoriamente como la esfera en que ninguna molécula puede estar fuera de sus límites precisos. Es Julio Cortázar.

Julio Cortazar Portrait Session

Creó con sus ficciones un universo propio, un compendio asombroso de conjeturas, espejos, laberintos, paradojas… Obra imprescindible de la literatura contemporánea, sus cuentos pertenecen a la categoría de las páginas antológicas. Utiliza un singular estilo literario basado en la interpretación de conceptos como los de tiempo, espacio, destino o realidad. La simbología que utiliza remite a los autores que más le influencian -William Shakespeare, Thomas De Quincey, Rudyard Kipling o Joseph Conrad-. A lo largo de toda su producción creó un mundo fantástico, metafísico y totalmente subjetivo. Su obra, exigente con el lector y de no fácil comprensión, ha despertado la admiración de numerosos escritores y críticos literarios de todo el mundo. Describiendo su producción literaria, el propio autor escribió: “No soy ni un pensador ni un moralista, sino sencillamente un hombre de letras que refleja en sus escritos su propia confusión y el respetado sistema de confusiones que llamamos filosofía, en forma de literatura”. Es Jorge Luis Borges.

borges

Ambos nacidos en el seno de la patria argentina, ambos escritores y cuentistas. Son dos representantes del género quienes descubrieron con su pluma mundos inmediatos y desmenuzaron las posibilidades del ser que habitan en un relato corto. Cortázar y Borges legaron en su producción literaria joyas talladas como cuentos: narraciones breves que abordan temas universales desde la intimidad de cada autor.

Dejamos 100 cuentos de Julio Cortázar y Jorge Luis Borges, escritos que se han convertido en clásicos del relato corto y que forman parte de las páginas de otros volúmenes o antologías de cuentos memorables:

Cortázar

Bestiario (1951)

1. Casa tomada
2. Carta a una señorita en París
3. Lejana
4. Ómnibus
5. Cefalea
6. Circe
7. Las puertas del cielo
8. Bestiario
Queremos tanto a Glenda (1980)

Borges
Ficciones (1944)

43. Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius
44. El acercamiento a Almotásim
45. Pierre Menard, autor del Quijote
46. Las ruinas circulares
47. La lotería en Babilonia
48. Examen de la obra de Herbert Quain
49. La biblioteca de Babel
50. El jardín de senderos que se bifurcan
51. Funes el memorioso
52. La forma de la espada
53. Tema del traidor y del héroe
54. La muerte y la brújula
55. El milagro secreto
56. Tres versiones de Judas
57. El fin
58. La secta del Fénix
59. El Sur
    El Aleph (1949)

    60. El inmortal
    61. El muerto
    62. Los teólogos
    63. Historia del guerrero y la cautiva
    64. Biografía de Tadeo Isidoro Cruz (1829-1874)
    65. Emma Zunz
    66. La casa de Asterión
    67. La otra muerte
    68. Deutsches Requiem
    69. La busca de Averroes
    70. El Zahir
    71. La escritura del Dios
    72. Abenjacán el Bojarí, muerto en su laberinto
    73. Los dos reyes y los dos laberintos
    74. La Espera
    75. El hombre en el umbral
    76. El Aleph
      El informe de Brodie (1970)

      77. La intrusa
      78. El indigno
      79. Historia de Rosendo Juárez
      80. El encuentro
      81. Juan Muraña
      82. La señora mayor
      83. El duelo
      84. El otro duelo
      85. Guayaquil
      86. El evangelio según Marcos
      87. El informe de Brodie
        El libro de arena (1975)

        88. El otro
        89. Ulrica
        90. El Congreso
        91. There are more things
        92. La secta de los treinta
        93. La noche de los dones
        94. El espejo y la máscara
        95. Undr
        96. Utopía de un hombre que está cansado
        97. El soborno
        98. Avelino Arredondo
        99. El disco
        100. El libro de arena
        - See more at: http://culturacolectiva.com/100-cuentos-de-julio-cortazar-y-jorge-luis-borges/#sthash.BcMaMdZA.dpuf

        ‘Yearning for a more beautiful world’: Pre-Raphaelite and Symbolist works from the collection of Isabel Goldsmith

        https://www.christies.com/features/pre-raphaelite-works-owned-by-isabel-goldsmith-12365-3.aspx?sc_lang=en&cid=EM_EMLcontent04144C16Secti...