Tristan Tzara Find out more about tristan tzara from The History Channel s free online encyclopedia. http://www.thehistorychannel.co.uk/site/encyclopedia/article_show/Tzara_Tristan_
DADA, The DADA Manifesto, Tristan Tzara DADA, the DADA Manifesto, tristan tzara. E. Varèse, Tr. tzara, Ph. Soupault, Soubeyran, J. Rigaut, G. Ribe mont-Dessaignes, M. Ray, F. Pi- http://www.ralphmag.org/AR/dada.html
Tzara/Tristan Architexturez Mail DeleuzeGuattari-L tzara/tristan. List Information Page (subscribe to this tristan tzara wrote to Clifford Duffy and Mona http://mail.architexturez.net/ /Deleuze-Guattari-L/archive/msg17473.shtml
Extractions: Receive email notification of new additions to our inventory! Select a Category Abolition Agriculture Americana Art Beats Black Cookery Courtesy Crime Economics Education Gay History Horticulture Husbandry Illustrated Books Incunabula Indians Judaica Juveniles Law Literature Music New Arrivals Occult Politics Press Reform Shaker Signed Slavery Technical Temperance Theater Travel Veterinary Medicine Woman Suffrage Women Enter your Email TZARA, Tristan. APPROXIMATE MAN And other writings Detroit, MI: Wayne State University, 1973. First Edition. 8vo, pp. 267. Translated with an introduction and notes by Mary Ann Caws. Includes notes. A nice copy in little scuffed dj. Tzara was founder of the Dada movement. This volume contains a broad selection of his writings. $50.00 Book Id: Inquire about this book Site Map Contact Us Privacy
Tzara, Tristan (1896-1963) - MavicaNET Translate this page Poète français (1896 - 1963), perturbateur et tumultueux, tristan tzara se réfugie à Zürich, lors de la première guerre mondiale. Il y retrouve en autres, http://mavicanet.com/directory/eng/18108.html
Tristan Tzara And Man Ray - Picture - MSN Encarta The careers of Man Ray, left, and tristan tzara, right, influenced several major art movements. tzara, a philosopher and poet, helped found the Dada http://encarta.msn.com/media_461542731/Tristan_Tzara_and_Man_Ray.html
Extractions: var s_account="msnportalencarta"; MSN home Mail My MSN Sign in ... more Hotmail Messenger My MSN MSN Directory Air Tickets/Travel Autos City Guides Election 2008 ... More Additional Reference Materials Thesaurus Translations Multimedia Other Resources Education Resources Math Help Foreign Language Help Project Planner ... Appears in Picture from Encarta The careers of Man Ray, left, and Tristan Tzara, right, influenced several major art movements. Tzara, a philosopher and poet, helped found the Dada movement, a school of politics, performance, and art that emerged in reaction to the horrors of World War I. American-born Ray had exchanged letters with Tzara before moving to Paris in 1921 to pursue a career in photography. Rayâs interest in the absurd influenced his photographs and his later work on surrealist motion pictures. Stefano Bianchetti/Corbis Appears in these articles: Dada; French Literature; Ray, Man; Tzara, Tristan ... Join Now Advertisement
Tristan Tzara Translate this page POEMAS DE tristan tzara. AGUA SALVAJE AMIGA MAMIE CANCIÓN ANTIGUA. DUDAS. ELEGÍA. ELEGÍA PARA LA LLEGADA DEL INVIERNO http://amediavoz.com/tzara.htm
Extractions: Shopping Cart Items Paris: Editions de la Montagne, 1930. 165 x 251 mm. One of 65 copies on Arches from the total deluxe edition of 121. Signed in ink by the artist and author on the colophon. Original wrappers in glassine. Pages partially uncut. With 4 original lithographs: Mourlot nos. 2-5. Presented in a cloth chemise and quarter-morocco slipcase. Cramer, 1; Rauch, 163.
Urntaroutexas.hrc.00004 Daisy Aldan An Inventory Of Her Papers Denise Levertov, Michael McClure, James Merrill, Henry Miller, Harold Norse, Charles Olson, Elliott Stein, May Swenson, Alice B. Toklas, tristan tzara, http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/uthrc/00004.xml
Extractions: urn:taro:utexas.hrc.00004 Daisy Aldan: An Inventory of Her Papers at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center David H. Sparks University of Texas at Austin Text converted and initial EAD tagging provided by Apex Data Services, September 2000. Finding aid written in English Tue Jul 22 15:07:52 CDT 2003 urn:taro:utexas.hrc.00004 converted from EAD 1.0 to 2002 by v1to02.xsl (20030505). Descriptive Summary Aldan, Daisy, 1923- Daisy Aldan Papers 3 boxes (1 linear foot) Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Texas at Austin Daisy Aldan, perhaps best known for her poetry and editorial work, is also an accomplished translator and teacher. Her papers emphasize her editorial work, in particular her efforts for (1953-59). Her own work is also represented by materials from and as well as her translation of by Stephanie Mallarme. English. Biographical Sketch Daisy Aldan was born in 1923 in New York City to Louis Aldan, a designer, and Esther Edelheit Aldan, an actress. She received a B.A. degree from Hunter College in 1943, and an M.A. from Brooklyn College in 1948, and did further graduate study at New York University. While primarily known as a poet, editor, and translator, she has given readings and lectured extensively throughout the United States, Switzerland, India, France, and Germany. She has also taught English, creative writing, literature, speech, and film studies at the New York School of Art and Design, Emerson College (Sussex, England), the Rudolf Steiner Institute (NY), and at the Goetheanum (Switzerland). Aldan, while part of the New York City poetry scene of the 1950s and 1960s, is not well known outside urban literary circles. She was aware of and friends with the Beats, but her style was more influenced by modern French poetry and metaphysics. Aldan has said that her primary motivation is
Extractions: (Townsend Martin Class of 1917 Professor of Art and Archaeology, Princeton University) Reading Groups Click here for a PDF file describing the reading groups To access JSTOR or Ingenta Connect articles, either you must be using a computer that is logged into a UW network or you need to be running a proxy server that allows you to access the UW Libraries' restricted resources When you click on the links to the PDF files, you will be prompted for your UW NetID and password if you have not already entered them during your browser session. You must have a NetID to access the files. In order to provide users with adequate resolution for printing, the file size of most PDFs is well over 1 MB. Some readings have been split into two or more separate files for easier downloading. PDFs of images are provided as separate files in grayscale and are optimized for screen viewing only. Reading Group 1: Narratives of Dada, Past and Present
French Poetry In Translation tzara, tristan, The Grand Lament of My Obscurity Two. Trans. tzara, tristan, The Salt and the Wine. Trans. Jerome Rothenberg. O.ARS (No. http://epc.buffalo.edu/documents/frenchpoetry.html
Extractions: Kristin Prevallet Albiach, Anne-Marie, "An Object of Anarchy."Trans. Anthony Barnett. Moving Letters (No. 4, November, 1984), pp. 1-2. Albiach, Anne-Marie, "An Object of Anarchy." Trans. Anthony Barnett. Série d'écriture (No. 3, 1989), pp. 13-14. Albiach, Anne-Marie, "A Reminiscence." Trans. Anthony Barnett. Moving Letters (No. 4, November, 1984), p. 5. Albiach, Anne-Marie, "A Small Boat Is Burning on the Banks of the Port." Trans. Joseph Simas. Tyuonyi (No. 9/10, 1991), p. 15. Albiach, Anne-Marie, "Commentary or Monologue." Trans. Keith Waldrop. Paper Air (Vol. 3, No. 1, 1982), pp. 75-79. Albiach, Anne-Marie, "Distance: 'Analogy'." Trans. Serge Gavronsky. Tyuonyi (No. 3, 1987), pp. 134-150. Albiach, Anne-Marie, "'Fever'." Trans. Anthony Barnett. Moving Letters (No. 4, November, 1984), p. 2. Albiach, Anne-Marie, "'H II' Linear." Trans. Anthony Barnett and Joseph Simas. Temblor (No. 5, 1987), pp. 66-77.