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| | Tristan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Tristan and Isolde as depicted by Herbert Draper (1864 -1920). |  | | Tristan honors, respects, and loves King Mark as his mentor and adopted father; Isolde is grateful that Mark is kind to her, which he is certainly not obliged to do; and Mark loves Tristan as his son, and Isolde as a wife. |  | | Tristan is a fairly common given name, belonging to numerous individuals, fictional characters, and places; notable ones include Dadaist poet Tristan Tzara, Laurence Sterne's novel and character Tristram Shandy, famous Gibraltarian Tristan Cano, the Atlantic island of Tristan da Cunha, and Peter Carey's novel The Unusual Life Of Tristan Smith. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tristan
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| | MSN Encarta - Multimedia - Tristan Tzara and Man Ray |
 | | Tzara, a philosopher and poet, helped found the Dada movement, a school of politics, performance, and art that emerged in reaction to the horrors of World War I. American-born Ray had exchanged letters with Tzara before moving to Paris in 1921 to pursue a career in photography. |  | | Ray’s interest in the absurd influenced his photographs and his later work on surrealist motion pictures. |  | | The careers of Man Ray, left, and Tristan Tzara, right, influenced several major art movements. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/media_461542731/Tristan_Tzara_and_Man_Ray.html
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| | Personality of the Week - Rosenstein |
 | | Tzara was considered the movement's most articulate exponent, expressed in his Romanian and French poems (he lived in Paris from 1919). |  | | In 1912, he began to publish poems in a symbolist style, which were to be highly influential in Romanian poetry. |  | | As the avant-garde turned to Surrealism, he joined forces with that group and his work became more restrained and sober. |
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http://www.bh.org.il/names/POW/rosenstein.asp
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| | Le fruit permis |
 | | Tzara wrote a poem for Delaunay at the opening of her boutique Simultané at the international Art Deco fair of 1925. |  | | The poet Tristan Tzara was born in Romania, wrote the first Dadaist text in Zurich, and introduced Paris to Dadaism in 1919. |  | | Le fruit permis : poèmes / Tristan Tzara ; avec quatre compositions au pochoir de Sonia Delaunay. |
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http://www.kb.nl/bc/koopman/1951-1960/c06-en.html
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| | Tzara, Tristan on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | Tzara moved to Paris in 1921 and worked with André Breton. |  | | TZARA, TRISTAN [Tzara, Tristan], 1896-1963, French writer, b. |  | | De Tzara à Duchamp: 1500 oeuvres du mouvement Dada au centre Pompidou |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/T/Tzara-T1r.asp
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| | Tristan Tzara |
 | | Tzara's intense energy was indispensable to the artistic movement which started life in the Cabaret Voltaire and rapidly became known as 'Dada'. |  | | By 1930 Tzara gave up the pessimisum of Dada for the fecked upness of Surrealism. |  | | It was through Tzara and his acquaintance with Marinetti that the Dadaists held correspondence with this movement ('Brutism' - noise music - was also nicked from them). |
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http://www.spa.ex.ac.uk/drama/dada/page8.html
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| | About the Authors: Tzara, Rilke, Duprey and Tengour |
 | | Tzara eventually broke with Breton and Surrealism, and by the 1930s had joined the French Communist Party. |  | | It was Tzara who was the first to have poems recited simultaneously at the Cabaret Voltaire, and who took over the primary editorial responsibility of the publication of Cabaret Voltaire, which was used to record the growing and diverse Dada art. |  | | In 1919 Tzara moved to Paris, joining with André Breton, Philippe Soupault, and Louis Aragon to create public spectacles and readings, where manifestos, poems and skits designed to provoke and outrage audiences were performed. |
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http://www.inconundrum.com/site/262875/page/117186
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| | APR May/Jun 2002 Vol. 31/No. 3 Tristan Tzara |
 | | Tristan Tzara was the author of the first Dada texts La Premiere Aventure celeste de Monsieur Antipyrine (1916) and Vingt-cinq poemes (1918), as well as the manifestos, Sept manifestes Dada (1924). |
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http://www.aprweb.org/issues/may02/tzara.html
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| | Tristan Tzara - Dada - Anti*Matters - The Spirit of Bohemia |
 | | Tristan Tzara, a small, absurd and insignificant individual was giving a lecture on the art of becoming charming. |  | | "Tzara gave French poetry a new impetus, a sudden acceleration. |  | | What would Dada have been without Tzara's poems, his insatiable ambition, his manifestos, not to speak of the riots he produced in such a masterly fashion? |
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http://www.bohemiabooks.com.au/anti/dada/dadaists/tzara/tzara.html
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| | MSN Encarta - Search Results - Tristan |
 | | Tzara, Tristan (1896-1963), French essayist and poet, born in Romania, known primarily as the founder of the Dada movement (Dada). |  | | Corbière, Tristan (1845–1875), originally Edouard Joachim Corbière, French poet, whose volume of poems Les amours jaunes (Yellow Loves, 1873) went... |  | | See all search results in Photos and more (5) |
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http://ca.encarta.msn.com/Tristan.html
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| | ICFFS-Cultural Memory Program |
 | | Tristan Tzara (1896-1963) is well remembered as a major cultural figure who acted at the center of Dada and Surrealism. |  | | He is also almost entirely forgotten as a writer of poetry, especially that which is written in prose. |  | | Principally, I shall be asking why it is that the memory of Surrealist writers suchs as Breton, Eluard and Aragon should have been sanctified on the Bible paper of the Bibliothèque de la Pléiade, while the life and works of Tzara are either remembered in highly localized areas or not at all. |
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http://www.fsu.edu/~icffs/abstracts/Forcer.html
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| | ___U B U W E B___ : ___Tristan Tzara___ |
 | | Janco (1895-1985), a Romanian painter and engraver, had become acquainted with Tzara in 1912, working with him on the magazine "Simbolul." Whilst studying architecture in Zurich in 1915, he met Tzara again and became involved in the Cabaret Voltaire, for which he made woodcuts and abstract reliefs, posters, costumes and masks. |  | | The simultaneous poem demonstrates the value of the human voice and is a powerful illustration of the fact that an organic work of art has a will of its own. |  | | Tristan Tzara, pseudonym of Sami Rosenstok, born at Moinesti, Rumania, in 1896, died in Paris in 1963. |
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http://www.ubu.com/sound/tzara.html
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| | fUSION Anomaly. Tristan Tzara |
 | | Tzara, Tristan (1896-1963), French essayist and poet, born in Romania, known primarily as the |  | | Interestingly, much work HAS been done in the development of art as a science: it is called surrealism. |  | | First in Zürich, Switzerland, and later in Paris, Tzara wrote the movement's first manifestos, describing its nihilistic tenets. |
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http://fusionanomaly.net/tristantzara.html
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| | Tristan Tzara -- Britannica Student Encyclopedia |
 | | The Romanian-born French poet and essayist Tristan Tzara is known mainly as the founder of Dada, a nihilistic revolutionary movement in the arts. |  | | Resolutely antiestablishment, Dada denounced pretension in the art world and... |  | | Disgusted by bourgeois values and despairing over World War I, the Dadaists embraced irrationality and attacked all formal artistic conventions. |
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http://www.britannica.com/ebi/article-9339046?tocId=9339046
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| | Dadaism and Surrealism |
 | | While in Zürich, many of these artists and writers continue to publish and exhibit their works; having taken strong anti-war views themselves, their art also shows such opinions of disgust towards the activities of the rest of the continent. |  | | Picabia and Breton publish works attacking the dadaists, who led by Tzara, publish a counter-attack, but the Paris DaDa group also dissolves. |  | | An exhibit entitled "Die Neue Kunst" ("The New Art") is held in Zürich in September, featuring works by several of the dadaists. |
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http://www.chss.montclair.edu/~nielsenw/dada.html
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| | Violence in the Avant-garde : Assignment for Monday, March 5, 2001 |
 | | Much later, Tzara admitted his admiration for African poetry in a short manifesto-like, quasi-poetic essay entitled "A Note on Poetry": "Poetry lives first of all for the functions of dance, religion, music and work" (Joris 76). |  | | How does her poem differ from Tzara's "Toto-vaca"? |  | | Look carefully at Lacroix's poem (page 59) and read it aloud. |
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http://www.unc.edu/~relangst/avantgarde/homework23.html
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| | Documents of Dada and Surrealism: Dada and Surrealist Journals in the Mary Reynolds Collection |
 | | "The beginnings of Dada," Tristan Tzara remarked, "were not the beginnings of art, but of disgust."[5] As Marcel Janco recalled: "We had lost confidence in our culture. |  | | As Huelsenbeck recalled, as Dada gained momentum, Tzara took on the role of a prophet by bombarding French and Italian artists and writers with letters about Dada activities. |  | | Attempting to promulgate Dada ideas throughout Europe, Tzara launched the art and literature review Dada. |
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http://www.artic.edu/reynolds/essays/hofmann.php
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| | Tristan Tzara Info - Encyclopedia WikiWhat.com |
 | | Tristan Tzara (April 16, 1896 - December 24, 1963) is the pseudonym of Sami Rosenstock, a Romanian-born French poet and essayist known mainly as a founder of Dada, a nihilistic revolutionary movement in the arts. |  | | The Dadaist movement originated in Zürich during World War I; Tzara wrote the first Dada texts - La Première Aventure céleste de Monsieur Antipyrine (1916; "The First Heavenly Adventure of Mr. |  | | Download the Transformers theme ringtones free for your Cingular, Sprint, or T Mobile cellular phone. |
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http://www.wikiwhat.com/encyclopedia/t/tr/tristan_tzara.html
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| | mital-U : cabaret voltaire / dada zurich : chronicle by tristan tzara |
 | | Lecture by Tzara: 'About abstract Art' with lanternslides. |  | | Arp van Rees Mrs van Rees exhibition, at the Tanner Gallery - great rumour new men see in paper - and only see a world of crystalsimplicitymetal - neither art nor painting (Choir of critics: "What to do?" Exclusive constipation) a world of clearnesslinepreciseness turns a somersault for some brilliant-expected wisdom. |  | | (Reverdy, Raimondi, Hardekopf, Huelsenbeck, Picabia, Prampolini, Birot, Soupault, Arp, Segal, Janco, Richter, Dermée, Huidobro, Savinio, Tzara made contributions). |
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http://www.mital-u.ch/Dada/dadatte.html
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| | Tristan Tzara artist and art...the-artists.org |
 | | Posters, graphics, original art and books by the Dada artists. |  | | Share your comments about the artist Tristan Tzara |  | | On view at the Whitney Museum of American Art through May 28, 2006 |
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http://the-artists.org/ArtistView.cfm?id=D9900F22-C762-11D4-A93800D0B7069B40
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| | The Transcendental Friend no. 12, 11/99 - Idiosyncratica |
 | | After the split with the surrealists, Tzara continued his dada activities, wrote his seminal poem The Approximate Man (in French), joined the communist party, fought in the French underground during the second world war. |  | | These poems were written around 1912-1913, in Romanian, before he left for Switzerland where he, along with Marcel Jancu and Hans Arp, orginated the concept of Dada with their performances at Café Voltaire. |  | | The Romanian of these poems is consciuosly wayward, in direct revolt against the symbolist literati poetry of the period. |
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http://www.morningred.com/friend/1999/11/pages/idiosyncratica.html
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| | Ars Libri, Ltd. |
 | | Tzara fait 3 conférences: 1/cubisme, 2/art ancien et art nouveau, 3/lart présent. |  | | This one, whose existence is alluded to by Tzara in his "Chronique zurichoise," has never, to our knowledge, been reproduced or described. |  | | Dokumentations-Bibliothek III: Teile der Bibliothek und Sammlung Tristan Tzara, Paris, 12. |
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http://www.arslibri.com/cat130w28.htm
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| | 4x1 by Tristan Tzara, Rainer Maria Rilke, Jean-Pierre Duprey and Habib Tengour - R A I N T A X I o n l i n e |
 | | Tzara's work opens the book with his Dadaist renditions of African and Australian aboriginal songs, chants, spells and poems. |  | | Rilke's cold retreat into his blessed solitude is presented against Tzara's inspired Poèmes Nègres and the Algerian poet Habib Tengour's devastating relation of colonial rule in The Old Man of the Mountain. |  | | Instead of being "a great negative work of destruction" in the Dadaist vein, these ethnopoetic re-visions constitute "a positive work of recovery and a return to the lost basis of human poesis," to use the words of Jerome Rothenberg. |
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http://www.raintaxi.com/online/2003summer/4x1.shtml
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| | Tristan Tzara |
 | | Click here to read Tzara’s poem, «La grande complainte de mon obscurité trois». |  | | Though he is often associated with the destruction of language, he continued to experiment with imagery, producing fragmented works of great vigour. |
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http://french.chass.utoronto.ca/fcs195/tzara.html
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| | Alibris: Tristan Tzara |
 | | Translated as a labor of love over a ten year period the poems encompass the full range of Tzara's works, the results of which have brought Tzara's poetry to life for English language readers for over 25 years. |  | | This major anthology of writings by legendary poet Tristan Tzara (1896-1963) is the only English language source for a complete version of Tzara's epic Approximate Man now widely regarded as the poetic masterpiece of Surrealism. |  | | by Tristan Tzara, Jean Arp, Mary Ann Caws (Translator) |
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http://www.alibris.com/search/books/author/Tzara,Tristan
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| | Tzara's 8th.html |
 | | Tristan Tzara, "a small, absurd, and insignificant individual," barely twenty years old, had already begun to accomplish what every BFA artist dreams of, and what never shows up on their tax returns. |  | | Tristan Tzara, whose name is virtually synonymous with Tristan Tzara, is still very DADA. |  | | (Tristan Tzara says to you : "Thought is made in the mouth." That's why I'm not thinking.) |
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http://www.dadatypo.com/tzara8.html
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| | MiPO 2005 |
 | | The two poems chosen here are from his early pre-Dada poems, written when Tzara was a teen, and which were later collected in Romania under the title of Primele Poeme (First Poems). |  | | Among the published poets translated by Semilian are: Paul Celan, Gellu Naum, Tristan Tzara, Benjamin Fondane, Stefan Augustin Doinas, Tudor Arghezi, Urmuz, Gherasim Luca, Ilarie Voronca, Mircea Cartarescu. |  | | One of the principal founders of Dadaism, he later became one of the seminal forces of the Surrealist group in Paris. |
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http://www.mipoesias.com/Volume19Issue3Gudding/semilian.html
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| | Max Ernst / L'Antitte (Antihead) by Tristan Tzara , volume I: Monsieur Aa l'Antiphilosophe (Paris: Bordas, 1949) ... |
 | | This image is one of over 118,000 from The Art Museum Image Consortium Library (The AMICO Library), a growing online collection of high-quality, digital art images from 39 museums around the world. |  | | L'Antitte (Antihead) by Tristan Tzara, volume I: Monsieur Aa l'Antiphilosophe (Paris: Bordas, 1949) |  | | Title: L'Antitte (Antihead) by Tristan Tzara, volume I: Monsieur Aa l'Antiphilosophe (Paris: Bordas, 1949) |
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http://www.davidrumsey.com/amico/amico132016-49806.html
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| | Tzara |
 | | Writer associated with the Dada movement in Zurich and Paris. |  | | The International Dada Archive has extensive holdings of works by and about Tzara. |
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http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/dada/tzara.html
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| | Surrealist Games |
 | | How to write a Dadaist Poem (method of Tristan Tzara). |  | | The story that never ends, the story that never really begins. |  | | Note: Uploading to the infinite story and other games is currently disabled. |
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http://www.madsci.org/~lynn/juju/surr/games/games.html
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| | TRAVESTIES |
 | | Man Ray Photo Archive; Tzara, Max Ernst, Antoine Artaud and others (awesome Tzara photo!) |  | | André Breton, Paul Éluard, Tristan Tzara and Benjamin Péret |  | | Write Design Online: Dada - has production pictures of Tzara |
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http://www.uwgb.edu/malloyk/travesties.htm
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| | E T H N O P O E T I C S :: P O E M S |
 | | [Note: This is one of Tzara's dada-ized workings, from which his own poem, "Ange" (Angel), is derived.] |  | | The complete Joris versions appear in his book, 4 x 1 (translations from Rilke, Tzara, Jean-Pierre Duprey and Habib Tengour), recently published by Inconundrum Press. |  | | Pierre Joriss translations are from Tzaras Poèmes Negres, gathered from ethnographic sources and announced for publication, but never published, circa 1916. |
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http://www.ubu.com/ethno/poems/01.html
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| | 391: manifestos: dadaist manifesto by tristan tzara, franz jung, george grosz, marcel janco, richard huelsenbeck, ... |
 | | Tristan Tzara, Franz Jung, George Grosz, Marcel Janco, Richard Hülsenbeck, Gerhard Preisz, Raoul Hausmann, |  | | by tristan tzara, franz jung, george grosz, marcel janco, richard huelsenbeck, gerhard preisz, raoul hausmann |  | | 391: manifestos: dadaist manifesto by tristan tzara, franz jung, george grosz, marcel janco, richard huelsenbeck, gerhard preisz, raoul hausmann, april 1918 |
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http://www.391.org/manifestos/191804dadaist.htm
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| | 391: manifestos: monsieur antipyrine's manifesto by tristan tzara, 14th july 1916 |
 | | Be we, DADA, don't agree with them, for art isn't serious, I assure you, and if we reveal the crime so as to show that we are learned denunciators, it's to please you, dear audience, I assure you, and I adore you. |  | | 391: manifestos: monsieur antipyrine's manifesto by tristan tzara, 14th july 1916 |
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http://www.391.org/manifestos/tristantzara_mam.htm
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| | Table of contents for Chanson Dada |
 | | Table of contents for Chanson Dada : Tristan Tzara, selected poems / translated by Lee Harwood. |  | | Bibliographic record and links to related information available from the Library of Congress catalog. |
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http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0519/2005027655.html
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| | University of Michigan Library Name Resolver Service |
 | | Title: Between Dada and Marxism: Tristan Tzara and the Politics of Position |  | | Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. |  | | Bibliographic information is provided to confirm the link. |
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http://name.umdl.umich.edu/anw0935.1991.001.10
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| | The Laughing Cow by William M. Razavi |
 | | Your fingerprints were all over the gun used to kill Tristan Tzara. |  | | O’NEILL: No, but you can tell me who killed Tristan Tzara. |  | | RORKE: I didn’t know he was dead until I read about it a few minutes ago. |
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http://www.trinity.edu/sgilliam/MATCHBOX/cowscript.html
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| | ARTseenSOHO - Tristan Tzara, from "Dada Manifesto, 1919" |
 | | Philosophy is the question: from which side shall we look at life, God, the idea, or other phenomena. |  | | If all of them are right and if all pills are Pink Pills, let us try for once not to be right. |  | | ARTseenSOHO - Tristan Tzara, from "Dada Manifesto, 1919" |
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http://www.artseensoho.com/Life/readings/tzara.html
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