A Selfmade Surrealist – Ideology and Aesthetics in the Work of Henry Miller

Blinder, Caroline. 2000. A Selfmade Surrealist – Ideology and Aesthetics in the Work of Henry Miller. NC: Camden House. ISBN 978-1571131331 [Book]

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Abstract or Description

Since the publication of Tropic of Cancer in 1934, Henry Miller has been the target of critics from all sides. A Self-Made Surrealist sets out to provide a view of Miller different from both earlier vindications of him as sexual liberator and prophet and more contemporary feminist critiques of him as pornographer and male chauvinist. In this re-evaluation of Miller's role as a radical writer, Blinder considers not only notions of obscenity and sexuality, but also the emergence of psychoanalysis, surrealism, automatic writing, and the aesthetics of fascism, as they illuminate Miller's more general 20th-century concerns with politics and mass psychology in relation to art. Blinder also considers the effect on Miller of the theoretical works of Georges Bataille and André Breton, among others, in order to define and explore the social, philosophical, and political contexts of the period. By examining the enormous impetus Miller got from being in the midst of French culture and its debate, A Self-Made Surrealist shows that Miller was indeed a seminal writer of the period rather than simply an isolated male chauvinist.

Item Type:

Book

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

English and Comparative Literature

Date:

2000

Item ID:

12918

Date Deposited:

25 Aug 2015 15:15

Last Modified:

23 Jun 2017 14:57

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/12918

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