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  1. Breton and Aragon “felt it was time to adopt new tactics . . . thenceforth the group was threatened by its own dissensions.” 16 Breton was determined to find a new strategy of heterogeneousness. Group dissension was a reserve strategy, to be used whenever the group itself threatened to become homogeneous, conformist, whether because of outside pressure or its own inertia.

  2. 26 de sept. de 2018 · Así creó André Breton el surrealismo. En un mundo donde todo se apegaba a lo que veían los ojos humanos, donde todo debía ser racional y donde esa era la razón de las discusiones intelectuales, surgió el surrealismo, un movimiento que primaba la libre expresión del pensamiento. André Breton fue su principal creador e ideólogo, incluso ...

  3. 10 reviews. September 18, 2022. What is Surrealism, by André Breton and edited by Franklin Rosemont, is an homage to the revolutionary and artistic fervor that persisted through the 19th and 20th centuries. A comprehensive history that sees no detail goes un-liberated, and every political accusation is retorted.

  4. Best André Breton Quotes. "All my life, my heart has yearned for a thing I cannot name." - André Breton

  5. 224 quotes from André Breton: 'Even that great poverty which had been and remains mine let up for a few days. I was not, as it happens, opposed to this poverty: I accepted to pay the price for not being a slave to life, to settle for the right I had assumed once and for all to not express any ideas but my own. We were not many in doing this…

  6. André Breton was born in 1896 to a family of shopkeepers in Tinchebray, a small town in Normandy, France. He studied medicine and psychiatry, displaying a special interest in mental illness. Though he never qualified as a psychoanalyst, he worked in neurological wards in Nantes during World War I,…

  7. Surrealism was an artistic, intellectual, and literary movement led by poet André Breton from 1924 through World War II. The Surrealists sought to overthrow the oppressive rules of modern society by demolishing its backbone of rational thought. To do so, they attempted to tap into the “superior reality” of the subconscious mind. “Completely against the tide,” said Breton, “in a ...