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Rallying sigh. (Books).


Manifesto: A Century of Isms. Edited by Mary Ann Caws Mary Ann Caws (born 1933) is an American author, art historian and literary critic.

She is currently a Distinguished Professor of English, French and Comparative Literature at the Graduate School of the City University of New York.
. Lincoln, NE, and London: University of Nebraska Press, 2001. 713 pages. $35.

My all-time favorite manifesto is the "Manifesto of the MX Missilists," issued September 8, 1980. "All pssseist, immobile, fixed-launcher guided-missile systems present such a monstrous spectacle of backwardness and obsolescence ob·so·les·cent  
adj.
1. Being in the process of passing out of use or usefulness; becoming obsolete.

2. Biology Gradually disappearing; imperfectly or only slightly developed.
 that our MX Missilist eyes turn away with profoundest disgust and contempt!" the Missilists announced. And, they declared, "We shall go further. We are prepared to argue that stasis stasis /sta·sis/ (sta´sis)
1. a stoppage or diminution of flow, as of blood or other body fluid.

2. a state of equilibrium among opposing forces.
 itself is dead. For if missiles should be placed upon cars, and those cars upon tracks, to move hither and thither Adv. 1. hither and thither - from one place or situation to another; "we were driven from pillar to post"
from pillar to post
 in response to the universal urge to avoid nuclear annihilation, why then, 0 asinine compatriots, should not hospitals be so emplaced?"

Neatly anticipating the arrival of the Reagan administration Noun 1. Reagan administration - the executive under President Reagan
executive - persons who administer the law
, this Futurist shout, published in the New Yorker by Ellis Weiner Ellis Weiner is an author and humourist who has previously worked as an editor of National Lampoon and a columnist for Spy Magazine. His humor has also appeared in The New Yorker, Paris Review, and the New York Times Magazine. , was less a parody than an update, despite the fact that it reads like a bad translation from Italian. Futurism futurism, Italian school of painting, sculpture, and literature that flourished from 1909, when Filippo Tommaso Marinetti's first manifesto of futurism appeared, until the end of World War I.  cannot be parodied. That was its strength and its purpose--to go farther in farther in

Of or relating to an option contract with an earlier expiration date than a contract that is currently owned or being considered.
 affirmation or denunciation DENUNCIATION, crim. law. This term is used by the civilians to signify the act by which au individual informs a public officer, whose duty it is to prosecute offenders, that a crime has been committed. It differs from a complaint. (q.v.) Vide 1 Bro. C. L. 447; 2 Id. 389; Ayl. Parer.  than anyone could ever possibly go in response. The Futurists knew how ridiculous they sounded--and they knew that when you registered your reasonable dissent the joke would be on you. For instance, Giacomo Balla's 1913 "Futurist Manifesto The Futurist Manifesto was written in 1909 by Filippo Tommaso Marinetti and issued to provide a concise collection of Futurists' thoughts, beliefs and intentions, in a declaratory form.  of Men's Clothing":

WE MUST DESTROY ALL PASSEIST CLOTHES, and everything about them which is tight-fitting, colorless, funereal fu·ne·re·al  
adj.
1. Of or relating to a funeral.

2. Appropriate for or suggestive of a funeral; mournful: funereal gloom.
, decadent, boring and unhygenic. As far as materials are concerned, we must abolish: wishy-washy, pretty-pretty, gloomy and neutral colors, along with patterns composed of lines, checks and spots. In cut and design: the abolition of static lines, all uniformities such as ridiculous turn-ups, vents, etc.

WE MUST INVENT FUTURIST CLOTHES, hap-hap-hap-hap-happy clothes with brilliant colors and dynamic lines. They must be simple, and above all they must be made to last for a short time only in order to encourage industrial activity and to provide constant and novel enjoyment for our bodies.

Which is to say that manifestos are fun. They're fun to write and often they're fun to read. They're fun to clock with complete disbelief. It's fun to go back to a line that stood out from the spew ("Poetry must be conceived as a violent attack on unknown forces"; "Barely maneuvering between truth, beauty, and the police station"; "Man is a curious body whose center of gravity is not in himself"; "You might, at least, keep quiet while I am talking"), and then to start over to see what you missed in the torrent of noise, speed, bluff, and megalomania megalomania /meg·a·lo·ma·nia/ (-ma´ne-ah) unreasonable conviction of one's own extreme greatness, goodness, or power.megaloma´niac

meg·a·lo·ma·ni·a
n.
1.
, in the whispers of seduction, entrapment entrapment, in law, the instigation of a crime in the attempt to obtain cause for a criminal prosecution. Situations in which a government operative merely provides the occasion for the commission of a criminal act (e.g. , bribery, and private jokes. All that is present in Manifesto, edited by Mary Ann Caws, professor of comparative literature at the City University of New York The City University of New York (CUNY; acronym: IPA pronunciation: [kjuni]), is the public university system of New York City.  and author of, among other books, The Surrealist Look: An Erotics of Encounter. What results is a playground, full of cliques, bullies, games, and, most of all, competition.

Buried under the grass is an 1836 Russian sound poem; way over by the fence is a 1996 American treatise on architecture. Nobody pays any attention to those things. Most of the action, you've learned in class, was in Europe in the first thirty years of the twentieth century, and the whole game was to get the word out before all the rules changed--before fascism, Stalinism, the Depression, the next war. So you swing on the steel bars of the Russian Futurists' 1912 "Slap in the Face of Public Taste" ("He who does not forget his first love will not recognize his last"), hang around Le Corbusier Le Corbusier (lə kôrbüzyā`), pseud. of Charles Édouard Jeanneret (shärl ādwär` zhänərā`), 1887–1965, French architect, b. La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland.  and his 1920 buddy Amedee Ozenfant ("The work of art is an artificial object which permits the creator to place the spectator in the state he wishes; later we will study the means the creator has at his disposal to attain this result") until deciding they're really creepy, join the Rayonists' 1913 face-painting gang ("It is time for art to invade life. The painting of our faces is the beginning of the invasion. That is why our hearts are beating so"), all before getting home in time for supper, doing your homework, and not falling asleep.

It's three in the morning and you can't get what Ilya and Mikhail were saying out of your head. It seemed new; it seemed like behind all the come-on-join-our-club stuff they knew how to get to the hole at the center of the earth.

We, creators, have nothing to do with the earth; our lines and colors appeared with us. If we were given the plumage plumage, of birds: see feathers.  of parrots, we would pluck out their feathers to use as brushes and crayons.

If we were given immortal beauty, we would daub over it and kill it--we who know no half measures.

We paint ourselves for an hour, and a change of experience calls for a change of painting, just as picture devours picture, when on the other side of a car windshield shop windows flash by running into each other: that's our faces.

"Those who make a revolution by halves," St. Just said at the height of the French Revolution, "only dig their own graves." The writers of art manifestos-- those that still communicate in their own voices--understood this with the instincts of the twentieth century, taking up the unfinished revolutions, political, aesthetic, and technological, of the century before.

A manifesto, then, was an extremist declaration that what should be will be, combined with an assertion that what has been will be consigned to the dustbin of history, if it's not there already. The manifesto is absolutist, as the Rayonists, in one of the great coups of Caws's research, make plain. Despite the likes of Kasimir Malevich's 1927 admission that

"Even I was gripped by a kind of timidity bordering on fear when it came to leaving 'the world of will and idea,'" the manifesto raises doubts only to banish them as weakness, sterility, corruption. In its insistence on the complete and instantaneous transformation of art, of the city, of the world, the manifesto catches the echo of medieval yearnings for the beginning of a new world in the destruction of the old, the wish traced so dramatically in Norman Cohn's 1957 The Pursuit of the Millennium--which placed such heresies as those of the Brethren of the Free Spirit "Free Spirit" redirects here. For the American television series, see Free Spirit (TV series). For the South African television series, see Free Spirit (South African TV series).  and the Anabaptists at the root of twentieth-century totalitarianism. In that sense the artist's manifesto is totalitarianism's good twin: good, perhaps, only because those who issued manifestos rarely got their hands on the power to do what they said they were going to do.

Though the manifesto sets itself against any sign of liberalism, tolerance, or compromise, that stance is partly a pose. Caws acknowledges "The Communist Manifesto" as a historical anchor, but not the Declaration of Independence, the Declaration of the Rights of Man Declaration of the Rights of Man

(1789) proclaimed legal equality of man. [Fr. Hist.: Payton, 186]

See : Freedom
 and of Citizens, or Emile Zola's "J'Accuse." And so it is both odd and, unfortunately, no surprise that save for a brief, ghettoized section on black identity and feminism, Caws excludes from her compendium any manifesto in which art and politics, aesthetics and the use of power, come together as one. This is a fundamental tradition not only of the manifesto, but of the twentieth century itself.

The omission of the Berlin Dada Club's incipiently fascist 1918 "What Is Dada and What Does It Want in Germany?"--which demanded control over both sex and entertainment--leaves a gaping hole in Manifesto. One can hear other silenced voices, among them the 1925 Surrealist petition "Revolution Now and Forever!"; the Situationist International's 1965 "The Decline and Fall of the Spectacle-Commodity Economy," in which the Watts riots were presented as a "critique of urban planning"; and Georges Bataille's 1933 "The Notion of Expenditure." There are countless more.

The playground in Caws's book, then, is a wonderland, with hairpin turns on the twisty slide and swings that go so high you don't believe you'll ever come down (see Stephane Mallarme's 1897 "A Throw of the Dice Will Never Abolish Chance," that rare manifesto in which you can actually feel the writer's own delirium delirium

Condition of disorientation, confused thinking, and rapid alternation between mental states. The patient is restless, cannot concentrate, and undergoes emotional changes (e.g., anxiety, apathy, euphoria), sometimes with hallucinations.
). But it is, despite the bow of its subtitle to the previous century, a very twenty-first-century playground: no guns allowed, not even toy guns.

Greil Marcus is a contributing editor of Artforum.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Review; Manifesto: A Century of Isms edited by Mary Ann Caws
Author:Marcus, Greil
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Jun 22, 2001
Words:1371
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