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E-raamat: Cannibalizing the Canon: Dada Techniques in East-Central Europe

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This rich, in-depth exploration of Dadas roots in East-Central Europe is a vital addition to existing research on Dada and the avant-garde. Through deeply researched case studies and employing novel theoretical approaches, the volume rewrites the history of Dada as a story of cultural and political hybridity, border-crossings, transitions, and transgressions, across political, class and gender lines. Dismantling prevailing notions of Dada as a Western movement, the contributors to this volume present East-Central Europe as the locus of Dada activity and techniques. The articles explore how artists from the region pre-figured Dada as well as actively cannibalized, that is, reabsorbed and further hybridized, a range of avant-garde techniques, thus challenging Western cultural hegemony.

Arvustused

Cannibalizing the Canon has the merit of shedding light on under-researched territories and overlooked issues in avant-garde historiography, restoring the contributions of those artists who did not figure in the canonical constructions of Dadaism and incorporating ephemeral art forms. Using new theoretical approaches and methodological frameworks, the volume challenges the singularity of Dadaism and its founding myths. The focus on the connections between local avant-gardes, employing transmedial and transnational perspectives, corrects and nuances some directions from avant-garde histories, contesting the hegemony of the West and a hierarchical system. Thus, the volume brings a significant contribution to the Dada movement and to the research of the avant-garde.

List of Illustrations

Notes on Contributors



Introduction: Dada Is more than Dada

Oliver A. I. Botar, Irina Denischenko, Gábor Dobó and Merse Pál Szeredi



Part 1:Topographies



1 An Exchange Point in a Network: Prague and Dada, 19181922

Jindrich Toman

2 Becoming Avant-Garde: Romanian Appropriations of Dada Techniques through
East-Central European Networking

Emanuel Modoc

3 Polish Responses to Dadaism: The Voices on Dada, Contacts and
Interpretations

Przemyslaw Strozek

4 The Dada Entracte of Dragan Aleksic

Jasna Jovanov

5 Hungarian Dada: the Missing Link

András Kappanyos



Part 2: In/Exclusions



6 Céline Arnauld, the Nomadic Avant-Garde Writer: a Transnational Approach
to Her Life and Work

Iulia Dondorici

7 Two Mysterious Mademoiselles: Jeanne Rigaud and Maria Cantarelli
A Multilingual Multi-Layered Dada Pun Unravelled?

Hubert van den Berg

8 Dada as an Avant-Garde Movement and as Invective

Károly Kókai

9 Dada Is the Best Paying Concern of the Day: Consumer Culture,
Performativity, and the Avant-Garde in Romania

Alexandra Chiriac



Part 3: Performativities



10 Marcel Breuer and Dada Performance: Remade Readymade Self and Furniture

Edit Tóth

11 Míra Holzbachová: Embodying the Avant-Garde

Meghan Forbes

12 To Write with Dots or Not to Write at All? Dada Ideas in Polish Interwar
Literature

Michalina Kmiecik

13 Green Donkey Theatre: a Case Study on Theatrical Innovations in the Name
of Dadaism

Sára Bagdi and Judit Galácz



Part 4: Trans(pos)itions



14 The Genesis of Dada: Futurist Influences in Germany, Romania and at the
Cabaret Voltaire

Günter Berghaus

15 Revolt and Authority: From Kassák to Erdély
Dada in the Hungarian Avant-Garde and Neo-Avant-Garde

Éva Forgács

16 Dadá, not Dáda: Moholy-Nagy in Berlin, 19201921

Oliver A. I. Botar

17 Words, Sounds, Images, Theories: the Authors of the Magazine IS in the
Context of Dadaism

Imre József Balázs

18 Self-Positioning in the International Avant-Garde: Kassáks Strategic Use
of Dada and Constructivism in the Book of New Artists

Krisztina Zsófia Csaba



Part 5: Hybridentities



19 Raoul Hausmann and the Welteislehre: Science and Identity

Arndt Niebisch

20 Dada Lingua Franca: The Linguistic Fate of Tristan Tzara and Raoul
Hausmann

Alexandru Bar and Michael White

21 Crossovers and Transgressions: Dada as a Life Strategy in Emil Szittyas
Works

Magdolna Gucsa

22 Android, Cyborg, Dandy and Woman

Representations of the Body in the Decadent and Dada Imaginations: The
Hungarian and International Contexts

Györgyi Földes

23 The New Man, According to Sándor Bortnyik

Merse Pál Szeredi



Index
Oliver Botar is a Professor of Art History and Associate Director of the School of Art at the University of Manitoba. His research focuses on early 20th-century Central European Modernism, particularly the work of Moholy-Nagy, with concentrations on art in alternative media, and Biocentrism and Modernism in early-to-mid 20th-century art.





Irina Denischenko is an Assistant Professor at Georgetown University. Her research focuses on 20th-century literature and visual art--especially the avant-garde, on critical theory, as well as on womens contributions to avant-garde and modernist aesthetics in Central and Eastern Europe.





Gábor Dobó is a research fellow at the Kassák Museum in Budapest. He is the principal investigator of a project focusing on the artist couple Lajos Kassák and Jolán Simon. In 2022, he was a Fulbright visiting scholar at Columbia University.





Merse Pál Szeredi is department head at the Kassák Museum. His research focuses on Hungarian avant-garde art and the history of Lajos Kassáks magazine Ma in Vienna between 1920 and 1925, with special emphasis on its international networks.