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Tag Archives: Olchar E. Lindsann
Choice Morsels from the Bouzingo: An Avant-Romanticist Sampler of Horror, Transgression, & Cultural Anarchy
edited by Olchar E. Lindsann, translated by Lindsann, Jonah Durning-Hammond & pilferingapples. A thick chapbook representing the first English-language collection of the seminal avant-garde collective (c.1830-35) that inspired Lautréamont, Dada, Surrealism, and the Situationists. Including poetry and art by fifteen … Continue reading
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Tagged 19th Century Avant-Garde, Achille Devéria, Acille Deveria, Alphonse Brot, Alphonse Esquiros, Anarchism, Anarchist Poetics, Anthology, Auguste Maquet, Augustus Mac-Keat, Augustus MacKeat, avant-garde, avant-garde history, avantgarde, Bousingots, Bouzingo, Bouzingos, Célestin Nanteuil, Celestin Nanteuil, Etching, Eugène Devéria, Eugene Deveria, French Romanticism, Frenetic Romanticism, Gérard de Nerval, Gerard de Nerval, Gothic Horror, Historiography, Jean Duseigneur, Jehan du Seigneur, Jehan duSeigneur, Jeune-France, Jeunes-France, Jeunes-Frances, Jonah Durning-Hammond, Joseph Bouchardy, Libertinism, Lithographs, Louis Boulanger, Nap Thom, Napoleon Thom, Napoleon Thomas, Napoleon Tom, Olchar E. Lindsann, Olchar Lindsann, Petit-Cénacle, Petit-Cenacle, Petrus Borel, Philothée O'Neddy, Philothée ONeddy, Philothee O'Neddy, Philothee ONeddy, PhilotheeO'Neddy, Pierre-Roch Vigneron, Revenant Camaraderie, Romanticism, Theophile Dondey, Theophile Gautier, Theophile O'Neddy, Utopian Socialism, Verse, visual art
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The Squitty Flange: A Florilegium of Dodgy Odes to that Rabbit Chunk Shim Frumpy Snorkel Sham Radish Dongle Stuff – Olchar E. Lindsann
A pudgy chapbook bulged with nearly 50 pages of poetry spawned from the squinty sea of nonsense verse à-la Lear, Carroll, Rabelais, Blaster Ackerman, Dr. Seuss, Stanchel, & co., with a delectable avant-garde & ‘pataphysical twist. 48 pp. on folded letter-size.$4.00 + s/h OR … Continue reading
Great Zines? Bad Zines? In Praise of the Zine-Trading Economy – by Olchar E. Lindsann
From the Pamphlet: No, all zines are not equal – just as no two individuals are equal. Yet in a healthy micropress culture, “good” & “bad” publications are thus definitively and structurally relativized; such judgements remain personal, or explicitly bound to affinity (including an affinity for well-crafted zines … Continue reading
Rêvenance 10
Rêvenance: A Zine of Hauntings From Underground Histories is the flagship journal of the Revenant Editions series, dedicated to the forgotten or untold histories of 19th Century avant-garde and other countercultures. It includes essays, translations, and many experimental forms of historical … Continue reading
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Tagged 'Pataphysics, Abdullah Cevdet, Alastair Brotchie, Alfred de Musset, Arthur Rimbaud, Bouzingo, Bouzingos, Bradley Lastname, Carl Alessi, constructed languages, Dance, Dance Hall culture, Decadence, Decadent Literature, Experimental Translation, Francis Vielé-Griffin, Frenetic Romanticism, Gavarni, Germaine Albert-Birot, Historiography, Jeunes-France, John Thomas Allen, Judith Gautier, Mário De Sa-Carneiro, Mélanie Waldor, Michael Helsem, Olchar E. Lindsann, Parnassianism, Pataphysics, Peter Lamborn Wilson, Petit-Cénacle, Petit-Cenacle, Petrus Borel, pilferingapples, Revenance, Revenant Editions, Revenant Revenant Camaraderie, Romanticism, Ron Sakolsky, Stuart Merrill, Su Tung-Po, Symbolism, Transduction
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We [Trade/Gift/Copy] Banned Books: An Underground Publisher’s Thoughts on the Banned Books Industry – by Olchar E. Lindsann
From the Pamphlet: It is not, in the U.S., Europe, and their global empires, the supposed agents of Democracy who are in charge of banning books; it is the agents of Capitalism. And indeed most of those who vocally oppose … Continue reading
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Tagged Critical Theory, Olchar E. Lindsann, underground publishing, zine
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Toward the Community of Activated Obsessions – by Olchar E. Lindsann
From the text: “Our friendships, collaborations, and conversations should not be founded on our similarities, while our divergences, our individual obsessions and eccentricities are mere garnishes; rather, we should take find our greatest joy and inspiration from playing with those … Continue reading
Delenda Est – by Olchar E. Lindsann
A rather pokey, somewhat gumby, slightly grisly, collage-emblazoned, compact little pamphlet-poem. 7 pgs on folded 8.5”x11”. Oct. A.Da. 105. (2021 Anti-Vulgar) $0.75 + 0.75 s/h or trade
In-Appropriated Press #17
–ed. Olchar E. Lindsann This issue returns the magazine to its local roots in the Roanoke & New River Valleys’ avant-underground, while still featuring work from poets and artists across the country who have become extended family through their collaboration … Continue reading
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Tagged avant-garde poetry, experimental poetry, Olchar E. Lindsann, Poetry, Post-Neo, Post-NeoAbsurdism, Verse
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Rêvenance #9
Rêvenance: A Zine of Hauntings from Underground Histories. Issue 9–ed. Olchar E. Lindsann Main themes in this issue: Anti-Racism, The African Diaspora, The Druyfus Affair, French Decadence & Symbolism, Diverse Translation Approaches, Feminist Hermeticism, the Fin-de-siècle Blood-drinking craze, Paris Dada. … Continue reading
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Tagged Aimé Césaire, Alfred Jarry, Alphonse Esquiros, Amy Oliver, Anarchism, Anti-Racism, Berthe de Courrière, Bradley Lastname, Dada, Dadaism, Decadence, Decadent Literature, Decadent Poetry, Experimental Translation, French Romanticism, Frenetic Romanticism, Hermeticism, Irène Hillel-Erlanger, Jack Foley, Jean Lorraine, John M. Bennett, Laurent Tailhade, Léon Valade, occultism, Olchar E. Lindsann, Paris Dada, Paschal Beverly Randolph, Pierre Albert-Birot, Raymond E. André III, Revenance, Revenant Editions, Reviews, Romanticism, Symbolism, Symbolist Literature, Symbolist Movement, Symbolist Poetry, Symbolists, Transduction
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The Acetyline Eye: Dada Texts 1915-1922 – Georges Ribemont-Dessaignes
translated & with introduction by Olchar E. Lindsann Georges Ribemont-Dessaignes hurled out much of the most formally transgressive shrapnel of verse to burst from the poetic explosion of Paris Dada. Among all of the group, Ribemont-Dessaignes was the most committed … Continue reading