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#1
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I have to do a report on experimental literature in the near future, but I cannot find any good books or web sites on it. Does anybody know a good resource, or perhaps know a little about expirimental literatature that they could tell me?
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#2
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What qualifies as experimental literature? Are you talking about surrealist, anti-surrealist or something else?
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#3
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All I know is that James Joyce is experimental literature, but I don't know if the genre includes more types of literature as well.
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#4
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) works.If experimental means along the lines of Ulysses and Finnegan's Wake I'm not sure what else really qualifies. These were experimental in their linguistic form. Sounds rather vague. I would consider Faulkner experimental. Same with Beckett, Proust, Kafka and Cummings. Sorry, I'm afraid I really don't understand but what qualifies, for the sake of the topic, as experimental. But I'm not a student of literature. In the past ten years of working with books I've never heard that particular class of writing before. I still think looking up an anthology like "The Automatic Muse" might be something you are looking for on this topic. It's as much a departure from classic writing as Joyce. Check Wiki or Google for the authors Andre Breton, Robert Desnos, Michel Leiris, Georges Limbour and Benjamin Péret. The last four are the authors included in the above mentioned title. The Dada movement might also be a good start. Don't remember much about it from what I read before but I think they tie in automatic writing and force inspiration as a way to liberate the self. Definitely experimental to me. But I'm just guessing here. I don't know if it helps or not. |
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#7
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#8
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You know, I was just thinking. My autobiography would certainly fit "experimental literature" tag well. You see, I am an avid meditator and am describing, in exhaustive detail, my inner experiences. In parts, I literally have created an "idea shape" of a very clear image to go with the written text. My foolhardy thinking is that the reader MAY "pick up" those rather intense images. I am not aware of any other work that has been written with this in mind ... no pun intended.
__________________
It is true that the early bird gets the worm, however, it is the second mouse, that gets the cheese. |
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#9
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Kurt Vonnegutt
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#10
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