Lettrism

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

French Lettrisme, ultimately from lettre (letter).

Proper noun[edit]

Lettrism

  1. A French avant-garde art and literary movement established in the mid-1940s, owing inspiration to Dada and surrealism.
    Coordinate term: situationism
    • 1983, Tom McDonough, quoting Jean-Paul Curtay, Lettrism: A Neo-Dadaism?, quoted in Guy Debord and the Situationist International: Texts and Documents, MIT Press, published 2002, →ISBN, page 442:
      So if lettrism, like Dada, came out of a reaction against a world war, Lettrism did not remain a protest . . . [but became] an exaltation of permanently renewed arts, philosophy, scientific knowledge, technology; []
    • 2006, Vincent Kaufmann, translated by Robert Bononno, Guy Debord: Revolution in the Service of Poetry, University of Minnesota Press, →ISBN:
      Isou's lettrism was the Wagnerian Gesamtkunstwerk in the grip of decomposition, a project for the total destruction of art, that is, a project of total art, another avatar of what Mallarmé ironically referred to as the Book, []

Further reading[edit]