Dada Dalai Lama, Buddha, Bible, and Nietzsche.

Je veux le mot là où il s'arrête et là où il commence. En disant Dada. Manifest zum 1. … I detest greasy objectivity, and harmony, the science that finds everything in order… I am against systems, the most acceptable system is on principle to have none.Perhaps the closest that Tzara comes to making a graspable statement of the Dada creed is this:I write this manifesto to show that people can perform contrary actions together while taking one fresh gulp of air; I am against action; for continuous contradiction, for affirmation too, I am neither for nor against and I do not explain because I hate common sense.Even in what should be a straightforward statement of the main strategy of Dada, “continuous contradiction,” Tzara recognizes that he would, in effect, be contradicting himself if he did not contradict himself and affirm affirmation as well.
Dada world war without end, dada revolution without beginning, dada, you friends and also—poets, esteemed sirs, manufacturers, and evangelists. ... -- Note au Manifeste DADA, 1918, ... 54. How does one become famous? .

We believe that the brilliant histories of art belong to everyone, no matter their background. Dada Manifesto (Manifeste DaDa, 14 July 1916) by Hugo Ball; Dada Manifesto (Manifeste Dada, 23 March 1918) by Tristan Tzara D'un geste noble et avec des manières raffinées. Et en esthétique, ce qui compte, c'est la qualité. Mais ce qui m'intéresse ici, c'est « l'acte de parole », l'acte manifestaire dans son projet et ses stratégies.
Till one goes crazy.

Par ce manifeste, Hugo Ball exprime son opposition à la transformation de Dada en un mouvement artistique.

I let the vowels quite simply occur, as a cat meows . Dada is the world soul, dada is the pawnshop.

Lorsqu'on en fait une tendance artistique, cela revient à vouloir supprimer les complications. Les intentions de T. Tzara sont sans équivoque. Very easy to understand. sept manifestes dada (1916-1920) ¬ MANIFESTE DE MONSIEUR ANTIPYRINE Lu à la première manifestation Dada à Zurich (salle Waag) le 14 juillet 1916.

The poet Tristan Tzara was a strong advocate of the international Dada movement, but his A manifesto (derived from a Latin word meaning “clear,” which is ironic in this case) is a document that states the beliefs and objectives of a group. Si une vibration mesure sept aunes, je veux, bien entendu, des mots qui mesurent sept aunes. Mr Schulz’s words are only two and a half centimetres long.It will serve to show how articulated language comes into being. The only gesture left to Dada is to tear down other people’s systems and illusions, as Tzara recognizes in scattered statements that almost read as genuine attempts at an absurdist or nihilist manifesto:There is no ultimate truth… Does anyone think that, by a minute refinement of logic, they have demonstrated the truth and established the correctness of their opinions?

Dada is a new tendency in art. / fly into a rage and sharpen your wings to conquer and disseminate little abcs and big abcs / sign, shout, swear, organize prose into a form of absolute and irrefutable evidence, to prove your The righteous zeal of manifestos repels Tzara, as does the way manifestos seek to impose a course of action on others.

C'est terriblement simple. Comment en finir avec tout ce qui est journalisticaille, anguille, tout ce qui est gentil et propret, borné, vermoulu de morale, européanisé, énervé ? Dada Manifesto (1916) Posted on 14th July 1916 by mycat8u Posted in Manifestos. Dada a son origine dans le dictionnaire.

Manifeste de l'école amorphiste 1913. Au, oi, uh. Das kann man daran erkennen, daß bisher niemand etwas davon wußte und morgen ganz Zürich davon reden wird. Does anyone think they have found a psychic base common to all humankind?” Any attempt to generalize knowledge or assert a universal human ideal is in vain:If I cry out: Ideal, ideal, ideal / Knowledge, knowledge, knowledge, / Boomboom, boomboom, boomboom, I have given a pretty faithful version of progress, law, morality, and all other fine qualities that various highly intelligent people have discussed in so many books, only to conclude that after all everyone dances to their own personal boomboom, and that the writer is entitled to his boomboom.The last couple of clauses begin to suggest a value and a purpose: “everyone dances to their own personal boomboom,” and each of us is entitled to our own boomboom.