La Retour de la Colonne Durutti
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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This '[[detournement|détourned]]' comic strip was distributed by [[flypost]]ing it at the University of Strasbourg. | This '[[detournement|détourned]]' comic strip was distributed by [[flypost]]ing it at the University of Strasbourg. | ||
- | The comic strip images and there translated speech balloons were featured in ''[[Ten Days that Shook the University]]''. | + | The comic strip images and their translated speech balloons were featured in ''[[Ten Days that Shook the University]]''. |
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+ | The rock album ''[[The Return of the Durutti Column]]'' (1980) was named after it. | ||
==Snippets== | ==Snippets== | ||
===En volant des marchandises=== | ===En volant des marchandises=== | ||
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*J.C.R [[Jeunesse communiste révolutionaire]] | *J.C.R [[Jeunesse communiste révolutionaire]] | ||
*Francisco Goya, [[Los Caprichos]], No. 49 “[[Duendecitos]]” (Hobgoblins). | *Francisco Goya, [[Los Caprichos]], No. 49 “[[Duendecitos]]” (Hobgoblins). | ||
- | *The photograph of two cowboys on horseback is [[George Hamilton]] and [[Arthur O’Connell]] in the movie ''[[A Thunder of Drums]]'' (1961). The dialogue between the two cowboys is actually a quote from the Situationist [[Michèle Bernstein]]’s novel ''[[All the King's Horses]]'' (1960). | ||
*[[Jules Ravachol]] (1859–1892) | *[[Jules Ravachol]] (1859–1892) | ||
*[[tapisserie de Bayeux]] | *[[tapisserie de Bayeux]] |
Revision as of 15:50, 15 August 2020
- De quoi t'occpes [sic] tu exactement ? English translation ‘What’s your scene, man?’ --"La Retour de la Colonne Durutti" (1966) by André Bertrand, English translation from Ten Days that Shook the University |
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"La Retour de la Colonne Durutti" (October 1966, The Return of the Durutti Column) was a four page comic strip as fold-out pamphlet by André Bertrand, consisting of film stills and other visuals with added text balloons.
This 'détourned' comic strip was distributed by flyposting it at the University of Strasbourg.
The comic strip images and their translated speech balloons were featured in Ten Days that Shook the University.
The rock album The Return of the Durutti Column (1980) was named after it.
Contents |
Snippets
En volant des marchandises
"En volant des marchandises pour les donner, certains blousons noirs evitent cette ambiguite. Ils reproduisent a un niveau superieur la pratique du don qui a domine les societes archa'iques et que l'echange, en tant que formalisation des rapports sociaux sur la base d'un faible niveau de developpement des forces productives, est venu miner. Ils trouvent ainsi une conduite encore mieux adaptee a une societe qui se definit elle-meme comme societe de l'abondance, et amorcent pratiquement son depassement." --L'indépendance de la marchandise, from Internationale Situationniste[1]
Un critique de la vie quotidienne
"Oui la pensée de Marx est bien un critique de la vie quotidienne.", set in a text balloon in Delacroix's The Death of Sardanapolous painting
Ces couillons syndicalistes
"Ces couillons syndicalistes vont surement [sic] encore nous prendre pour une ...", found in Proses du monde: Les enjeux sociaux des styles littéraires (2017) by Nelly Wolf
Features an image of Lenin
See also
- Durruti Column
- The Return of the Durutti Column
- Cerith Wyn Evans
- The Return of the Return of the Durutti Column (1997) by Cerith Wyn Evans
References
- Paris Match, “Lepoids des mots, le choc des photos”
- UNEF
- Associations générales d’étudiants
- Abraham Moles (1920–1992)
- morphone
- Positif
- Lenin
- J.C.R Jeunesse communiste révolutionaire
- Francisco Goya, Los Caprichos, No. 49 “Duendecitos” (Hobgoblins).
- Jules Ravachol (1859–1892)
- tapisserie de Bayeux
- Eugène Delacroix, The Death of Sardanapolous (1827) “critique of everyday life”