Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Description
The reading of Nadja may seem effortless at first, given that the novel's two hundred pages include fifty pages of illustrations. These pictures are of two kinds, photographs and drawings. Breton's different expressive modes, verbal and graphic, combine two opposite worlds, the written reference to the real Parisian places and the surreal sphere depicted in the avant-garde portraits and drawings. One of the primary surrealist technique is to mix different elements, such as illusion, the fantastic, and the dream in order to create a new world, free of any banal reality or logic to transport the reader out of mundane time-space. Therefore, the readers' problem is to determine whether these pictures are a graphic enhancement supplementing the verbal text, or on the contrary, a disjunctive element added to disturb the reader and to confuse the understanding of the verbal text with graphic enigmas.
Note
Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters
Extension
FAU
FAU
admin_unit="FAU01", ingest_id="ing1508", creator="staff:fcllz", creation_date="2007-07-19 04:38:45", modified_by="staff:fcllz", modification_date="2011-01-06 13:09:23"
Person Preferred Name
Sutton, Anne Claude.
Graduate College
Title Plain
relation enigmatique du texte et des images dans "Nadja"
Use and Reproduction
Copyright © is held by the author, with permission granted to Florida Atlantic University to digitize, archive and distribute this item for non-profit research and educational purposes. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions requires permission of the copyright holder.
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Physical Location
Florida Atlantic University Libraries
Title
relation enigmatique du texte et des images dans "Nadja"
Other Title Info
La
relation enigmatique du texte et des images dans "Nadja"