Migration und Avantgarde - Berlin/Boston De Gruyter 2020 - 1 electronic resource (376 p.)

Open Access

This volume is devoted to literature and the arts that were created in Paris from 1917's 2013;1962. The starting point is Vilem Flusser's conviction that migration experience and cultural innovation should be closely linked. France became the world's second most important immigration country after the United States in the interwar period. Authors came to the French metropolis from Eastern Europe, after the strengthening of the fascists from Italy, after 1933 from Germany, after the Spanish Civil War and after the consolidation of the Estado Novo in Portugal. Artists from Latin America were also present in Paris, and the Congres international des ecrivains pour la defense de la culture in June 1935 made the city the centre of intellectual resistance to fascism. But writers from all over the world also migrated to France after the Second World War. In addition to almost all languages 's 200B;'s 200B;of Romania, the articles also take into account the Arabic, Hebrew, German, Russian and Polish literature. This comparative approach can reveal unusual perspectives, relationships and fault lines.


Creative Commons

10.1515/9783110679458

Avant-garde movements