Les Champs Magnétiques
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- For the Jean-Michel Jarre album "Les Chants Magnétiques", see Magnetic Fields (album).
The book is considered Surrealist, rather than Dadaist, because it attempts to create something new rather than react to an existing work.
Les Champs Magnetiques is characterised by rich textured language that often seems to border on the nonsensical. This is considered a "normal" result of automatic writing and is considerably more logical than the output from other Surrealist techniques, such as exquisite corpse.
A typical paragraph in (an English-language version of) Les Champs Magnetiques is:
- The marvellous railway-stations never afford us shelter anymore: the long passages terrify us. So in order to go on living these monotonous minutes must still be stifled, these scraps of centuries. Once we loved the year's last sunny days, the narrow plains where our eyes' gaze flowed like those impetuous rives of our childhood. There remain nothing but reflections now in the woods repopulated with absurd animals, with well-known plants.
Breton gave many interviews about the creation of the book.
Reference
- The Magnetic Fields by Andre Breton and Philippe Soupault, translated and introduced by David Gascoyne: Atlas Press, London, 1985.
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