Raymond Spiteri and Donald Lacoss
General Editors' Preface, List of Illustrations, List of Contributors, Acknowledgments, List of Abbreviations, Introduction: Revolution by Night: Surrealism, Politics and Culture, 1 The Politics of Surrealism, 1920-36, 2 Towards a New Construction: Breton's Break with Dada and the Formation of Surrealism, 3 Surrealism and the Political Physiognomy of the Marvellous, 4 Advertising Surrealist Masculinities: Andre Kertesz in Paris, 5 Surrealism Noir, 6 Surrealist Racial Politics at the Borders of 'Reason': Whiteness, Primitivism and Negritude, 7 Painting and Politics: Miro's Still Life with Old Shoe and the Spanish Republic, 8 Of Politics, Postcards and Pornography: Salvador Dali's Le Mythe tragique de l'Angelus de Millet, 9 Surrealism in 1938: The Exhibition at War, 10 For an Independent Revolutionary Art: Breton, Trotsky and Cardenas's Mexico, 11 Aime Cesaire's Insurrectionary Poetics, 12 Hans Bellmer's Libidinal Politics, 13 Attacks of the Fantastic, 14 Failure and Community: Preliminary Questions on the Political in the Culture of Surrealism, Appendix I: Notes in the Hand of Leon Pierre-Quint Being the Record of a Conversation, Index