The Review of Contemporary Fiction
Anthology of Black Humor by André BretonJames Sallis
André Breton. Anthology of Black Humor. Trans. Mark Polizzotti. City Lights, 1997. 356 pp. Paper: $18.95.
In the twenties, its said, via Freud the world discovered sex. About the same time, André Breton discovered surrealismor was it the other way around?
Assembled in 1936, the Anthology was delayed first by publishing difficulties then by the wartime censorship boards refusal to approve it. Finally it came out in 1945 to almost total silence and was intermittently available as over the years it slowly garnered attention. A new edition was published in 1966 shortly before Bretons death; now for the first time its available in English. The Anthology, like the body, has a long memory. And what it remembers is the twentieth century: that nexus where unknowingly we changed railway cars, destination, clothes, habits, and mind. Bretons collection includes selections from Swift, Poe, Lewis Carroll, Baudelaire, Nietzsche, Charles Fourier, Jarry, Roussel, Duchampaltogether forty-five entries, each of them introduced by Breton, and it may be to the lancing percepts and verbal energy of these introductions that well hereafter return as much as to the texts themselves. Surrealism, if it was about anything, was about enthusiasm, about attempts at engagement, beyond knowledge and experience, with the worlds raw stuff. It was also about humor. The two are inextricably entwined, which is why this book, this exploration of the lugubrious tick-tock of the infernal machine that Lautréamont left on the minds doorstep, is so important. Freuds Jokes and Their Relation to the Unconscious first appeared in French translation in 1930, and Breton in his general introduction makes much use of it.
Beauty will be convulsive or it will not exist. Before Beauty, the surrealist lifts his hand to his forehead in saluteor to wipe away a tear the size of a plum? And always with one finger picking away at his nose. [James Sallis]