Difference between revisions of "Akasztott Ember"

From Monoskop
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Akasztott Ember: az egyetemes szocialista kultura orgánuma''' ( Hanged Man: "The Organ of Universal Socialist Culture".)was a magazine edited by [[Sándor Barta]] and published in Vienna in 5 numbers between November 1922 and February 1923. It was continued by ''[[Ék]]''.
+
'''Akasztott Ember: az egyetemes szocialista kultura orgánuma''' [Hanged Man: The Organ of Universal Socialist Culture] was a magazine edited by [[Sándor Barta]] and published in Vienna in 5 numbers between November 1922 and February 1923. It was continued by ''[[Ék]]''.
  
 
==Literature==
 
==Literature==

Revision as of 21:18, 1 December 2018

Akasztott Ember: az egyetemes szocialista kultura orgánuma [Hanged Man: The Organ of Universal Socialist Culture] was a magazine edited by Sándor Barta and published in Vienna in 5 numbers between November 1922 and February 1923. It was continued by Ék.

Literature

  • Oliver A.I. Botar, "From the Avant-Garde to 'Proletarian Art'. The Émigré Hungarian Journals Egység and Akasztott Ember, 1922-23", Art Journal 52(1): "Political Journals and Art, 1910-40", College Art Association, Spring 1993, pp 34-45; exp.version as "From Avant-Garde to 'Proletkult' in Hungarian Émigré Politico-Cultural Journals, 1922-1924", in Art and Journals on the Political Front 1910-1940, ed. Virginia Hagelstein Marquardt, University Press of Florida, 1997, pp 100-141. (English)
  • Éva Forgács, Tyrus Miller, "The Avant-Garde in Budapest and in Exile in Vienna: A Tett (1915-6), Ma (Budapest 1916-9; Vienna 1920-6), Egység (1922-4), Akasztott Ember (1922), 2x2 (1922), Ék (1923-4), Is (1924), 365 (1925), Dokumentum (1926-7), and Munka (1928-39)", in The Oxford Critical and Cultural History of Modernist Magazines, Vol. 3: Europe, 1880-1940, Oxford University Press, 2013, pp 1128-1156. [1]


Avant-garde and modernist magazines

Poesia (1905-09, 1920), Der Sturm (1910-32), Blast (1914-15), The Egoist (1914-19), The Little Review (1914-29), 291 (1915-16), MA (1916-25), De Stijl (1917-20, 1921-32), Dada (1917-21), Noi (1917-25), 391 (1917-24), Zenit (1921-26), Broom (1921-24), Veshch/Gegenstand/Objet (1922), Die Form (1922, 1925-35), Contimporanul (1922-32), Secession (1922-24), Klaxon (1922-23), Merz (1923-32), LEF (1923-25), G (1923-26), Irradiador (1923), Sovremennaya architektura (1926-30), Novyi LEF (1927-29), ReD (1927-31), Close Up (1927-33), transition (1927-38).