Tomeki
Cover of The hundred headless woman =

The hundred headless woman =

La femme 100 têtes

By Max Ernst,André Breton,Dorothea Tanning

4.00 (1 Ratings)
5 Want to read0 Currently reading1 Have read

Publish Date

1981

Publisher

G. Braziller

Language

eng

Pages

323

Description:

The Hundred Headless Woman is Ernst's first collage novel. It features a loosely narrative sequence of uncanny Surrealist collages, made by cutting up and reassembling nineteenth-century illustrations, accompanied by Ernst's equally strange captions. Ernst's French title, La Femme 100 têtes, is a double entendre; when read aloud it can be understood as either "the hundred-headed woman" or "the headless woman." Along with this enigmatic title character, the book marks the introduction of Ernst's favorite alter ego, Loplop, "the Bird Superior." Ernst was deeply engaged with illustrated books during the 1930s; in addition to collage novels, he created many etchings and lithographs to complement the poems and stories of Surrealist writers with whom he was closely associated.