Transmediality in Symbolist and Surrealist Photo-Literature

The fin de siècle period throughout Europe undoubtedly cultivated the “interdisciplinary principle of la fraternité des arts” (Genova 158). Literature, poetry, visual art and music superseded former hierarchical structures favouring the painterly. Correspondence between intellectuals would cross-fer...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Walden Lauren
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2017-11-01
Series:Open Cultural Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2017-0020
id doaj-112900f80ce04f84ba3339f9a08730c4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-112900f80ce04f84ba3339f9a08730c42021-09-06T19:19:46ZengDe GruyterOpen Cultural Studies2451-34742017-11-011121423110.1515/culture-2017-0020culture-2017-0020Transmediality in Symbolist and Surrealist Photo-LiteratureWalden Lauren0Visual Arts Research Group, Coventry University, Coventry, UKThe fin de siècle period throughout Europe undoubtedly cultivated the “interdisciplinary principle of la fraternité des arts” (Genova 158). Literature, poetry, visual art and music superseded former hierarchical structures favouring the painterly. Correspondence between intellectuals would cross-fertilise between disparate realms through publishing in interdisciplinary cultural journals that were distributed internationally across cosmopolitan cityscapes. The ability for the photograph to be mechanically reproduced, postulated by Walter Benjamin in 1936, allowed for one of the first transmedial aesthetics, to become known as photo-literature. Previously, reproduction had been confined to the textual realm. Bruges La Morte by Georges Rodenbach was the first ever work of photo-literature to commingle these respective art forms, sixty-five years after the invention of photography in 1827. Rodenbach’s novella was first published in 1892 at the height of the symbolist movement which spanned literature, painting, photography and more. Its pseudo-progeny, Andre Breton’s surrealist text Nadja was published in 1928 depicting the author’s meandering through the Parisian cityscape. In these works, text and image engender a sense of cosmopolitanism through the function of transposition.https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2017-0020surrealismsymbolismphoto-literaturetransmedialitycosmopolitanism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Walden Lauren
spellingShingle Walden Lauren
Transmediality in Symbolist and Surrealist Photo-Literature
Open Cultural Studies
surrealism
symbolism
photo-literature
transmediality
cosmopolitanism
author_facet Walden Lauren
author_sort Walden Lauren
title Transmediality in Symbolist and Surrealist Photo-Literature
title_short Transmediality in Symbolist and Surrealist Photo-Literature
title_full Transmediality in Symbolist and Surrealist Photo-Literature
title_fullStr Transmediality in Symbolist and Surrealist Photo-Literature
title_full_unstemmed Transmediality in Symbolist and Surrealist Photo-Literature
title_sort transmediality in symbolist and surrealist photo-literature
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Cultural Studies
issn 2451-3474
publishDate 2017-11-01
description The fin de siècle period throughout Europe undoubtedly cultivated the “interdisciplinary principle of la fraternité des arts” (Genova 158). Literature, poetry, visual art and music superseded former hierarchical structures favouring the painterly. Correspondence between intellectuals would cross-fertilise between disparate realms through publishing in interdisciplinary cultural journals that were distributed internationally across cosmopolitan cityscapes. The ability for the photograph to be mechanically reproduced, postulated by Walter Benjamin in 1936, allowed for one of the first transmedial aesthetics, to become known as photo-literature. Previously, reproduction had been confined to the textual realm. Bruges La Morte by Georges Rodenbach was the first ever work of photo-literature to commingle these respective art forms, sixty-five years after the invention of photography in 1827. Rodenbach’s novella was first published in 1892 at the height of the symbolist movement which spanned literature, painting, photography and more. Its pseudo-progeny, Andre Breton’s surrealist text Nadja was published in 1928 depicting the author’s meandering through the Parisian cityscape. In these works, text and image engender a sense of cosmopolitanism through the function of transposition.
topic surrealism
symbolism
photo-literature
transmediality
cosmopolitanism
url https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2017-0020
work_keys_str_mv AT waldenlauren transmedialityinsymbolistandsurrealistphotoliterature
_version_ 1717777801016246272