Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1654885906> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 81 of
81
with 100 items per page.
- W1654885906 endingPage "245" @default.
- W1654885906 startingPage "219" @default.
- W1654885906 abstract "Abstract: The purpose of this study is analyze the tenets that relate Dada's self-understanding of art. The phenomenon Dada is notoriously difficult describe; some critics hesitate even use the term movement. Focusing on Dadaists' reflections about the phenomenon itself, we will try delineate a general image of the Dada in the context of the European avant-gardes of the 20-th century. We will also try analyze the and political context inside which the dada phenomenon occurred. Our main focus will be on two main tenets of Dadaism: the self-critical feature of Dada's self-image as it emerges during the main phases of its history, especially during its early phase, and the political commitment of Dada during its last phases of development. Key Words: Dada, Romania, Hasidism, modernity, mostmodernity, politics, critique, ideology, propaganda The Meaning(s) of Dada The montage, the collage, the photomontage, the ready-made, or the happening have all developed nowadays into typical artistic techniques, occasionally cliched the point of tasteless kitsch. Surely, since the beginnings of XX-th century mass-culture, these techniques have been, in various forms and concentrations, entering the mainstream production lines of consumerist cultural objects. Despite all these, the usual contemporary reader of literature, it is relatively unknown that these modes of expression and these techniques were, basically, inventions of groups of artists at the beginning of the XX-century, revolutionary artists that rebelled against societal conventions, political structures, and social norms, against bourgeois institutions, narrow habits and mindless ideologies, and finally, against the situation of the art itself, which they considered artificial, immoral, false, and depraved. These artists were later labeled artists. In its earliest use, denominated the artistic groups around 1825, commonly associated with Saint-Simonism and Fourierism. The pre-socialist Olinde Rodrigues called upon artists to serve as an for social change and for a glorious future. He considered that had the power affect its audience and produce sensations that would ennoble thought as well as provide the energy for social change towards the common good. Richard Murphy, in his Theorizing the Avant-Garde (2004), produces evidence of a number of texts from the English Romantic writers, such as Wordsworth or Shelley. They echoed the humanitarian ideas of their age and held that the function of the work of is generate enlightening and civilizing emotions, which would bind people together, strengthening and purifying the affections and so enlarging the individual's capacity resist early modernity's negative effects - most notably those of alienation. In the German-speaking world, the most influential Romantic writer who encouraged this form of utopian aestheticism was Friedrich Schiller.1 In France, the utopian ideas about were discussed earlier by Condorcet and Rousseau and put into practice by the French Revolutionaries, especially Gracchus Babeuf and Pierre Sylvain Marechal (see their famous Manifesto of the Equals, 1796). Different from the German or the English writers, the French intellectuals of the Revolution were more interested in the propagation of real political goals or social policies. Purifying passions through and seeking virtuous instruction in the artistic oeuvres were not their main concern. Commenting on different meanings of the term avant-garde, Richard Murphy differentiates between the idealist avant-garde of the XIX-th century, characterized by the goal of reducing distance from and life and by the elevation of the worldly the ideal sphere of art, and the historical of the early XX-th century, delineated by its cynical attack on the once progressive function of social-based, utopian art. …" @default.
- W1654885906 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1654885906 creator A5074219748 @default.
- W1654885906 date "2010-12-21" @default.
- W1654885906 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W1654885906 title "Between “Critique” and Propaganda: The Critical Self-Understanding of Art in the Historical Avant-Garde. The Case of Dada" @default.
- W1654885906 hasPublicationYear "2010" @default.
- W1654885906 type Work @default.
- W1654885906 sameAs 1654885906 @default.
- W1654885906 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W1654885906 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W1654885906 hasAuthorship W1654885906A5074219748 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C107038049 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C111472728 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C158071213 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C184386139 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C2777617010 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C2778400925 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C2778682666 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C2779343474 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C2780876879 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C50335755 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C52119013 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C94625758 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConcept C95457728 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C107038049 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C111472728 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C138885662 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C142362112 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C144024400 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C158071213 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C166957645 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C17744445 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C184386139 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C199539241 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C2777617010 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C2778400925 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C2778682666 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C2779343474 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C2780876879 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C50335755 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C52119013 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C94625758 @default.
- W1654885906 hasConceptScore W1654885906C95457728 @default.
- W1654885906 hasIssue "27" @default.
- W1654885906 hasLocation W16548859061 @default.
- W1654885906 hasOpenAccess W1654885906 @default.
- W1654885906 hasPrimaryLocation W16548859061 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W1496907041 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W1803136241 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W18938252 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W1907554739 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W1910616406 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W201653436 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W2020614286 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W2022122235 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W2085798563 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W2093811447 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W2132977187 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W2226963702 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W2364068097 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W249540963 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W2557432472 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W261230553 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W2790789589 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W2846519056 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W2946686557 @default.
- W1654885906 hasRelatedWork W3085716596 @default.
- W1654885906 hasVolume "9" @default.
- W1654885906 isParatext "false" @default.
- W1654885906 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W1654885906 magId "1654885906" @default.
- W1654885906 workType "article" @default.