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Description
The Philosophical Frameworks of Surrealism offers the first comprehensive account of surrealism as a movement sustained – rather than merely ornamented – by philosophical ideas.
Moving far beyond the familiar narrative linking surrealism to Freud, this study reveals a century-long engagement with thinkers as diverse as Hegel, Heraclitus, Parmenides, Schelling, Novalis, Nietzsche, and Fourier, as well as traditions outside the Western canon, from ancient Egypt to Chinese thought.
Michael Richardson shows that surrealism was born of a network of encounters: collective experiments, shared crises after the First World War, and intense friendships that shaped its emergence between 1919 and 1924. Its philosophical orientation arose not from systematic study but from a “philosophical poetics” – a way of thinking through practice, intuition, and experiment.
Across ten chapters, Richardson traces surrealism's relationship with dialectical thinking, analogy, myth, and the marvellous. Hegel's ideas on mediation and becoming illuminate Breton's concerns with identity and recognition; Heraclitus' unity of opposites and Parmenides' journey into the unknown resonate with surrealism's pursuit of an “elsewhere” beyond perceptual reality; Schelling's philosophy of nature and the unconscious opens new vistas for understanding surrealism's animist sensibility, while Nietzsche's pessimism and affirmation of life sharpen its critique of modernity.
The Philosophical Frameworks of Surrealism is an essential resource for readers in philosophy, literature, art history, and modern intellectual history, offering a bold reconceptualization of the history of surrealism, and what it may still become.
Table of Contents
1. Poetry and Philosophy in Nineteenth-century France
2. Hegel and the Surrealist Imagination
3. Intimations from Ancient Egypt
4. Heraclitus and the Dynamic of Existence
5. Parmenides and Existence as 'Other'
6. Schelling and the Ages of the World
7. Novalis and Poetry's Revolutionary Potential
8. The Spectre of Nietzsche
9. The Materiality of the World
10. Fourier and Utopian Vision
Bibliography
Appendix
Product details
| Published | Oct 01 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 224 |
| ISBN | 9781350531383 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 10 bw illus |
| Series | Lines |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Existence is Elsewhere presents a fresh perspective on surrealism, highlighting its role as a significant contributor to the history of ideas rather than confining it to the realms of art history and literature. By expanding his expert analysis beyond Europe and the interwar period, Richardson enhances our understanding of surrealism as a dynamic and intellectually vibrant international movement.
Elliot King, Professor of Art History, Washington and Lee University, USA
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Existence is Elsewhere addresses a glaring gap in the scholarship on surrealism, persuading the reader that this century-old movement should really be thought of not as an aspect of literature and the visual arts, but as a revolutionary current of thought. Richardson guides us with insight through the movement's conversations with individual philosophers, some familiar and others more unexpected, yet at the heart of this study is the contention that surrealism engages not just with particular concepts and intellectual frameworks, but with the transformative potential of thought and knowledge themselves.
Krzysztof Fijalkowski, Professor of Visual Culture, Norwich University of the Arts, UK
























