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“Marinetti is foreign to us”: Polish Responses to Italian Futurism, 1917–1923
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Przemysław Strożek
Published/Copyright:
November 16, 2011
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Editorial: Aims and Functions of the International Yearbook of Futurism Studies
- Section 1: Critical responses to exhibitions, conferences and publications
- The Centenary of Futurism: Lame Duck or Political Revisionism?
- FUTURISM 2009. Critical Reflections on the Centenary Year
- A short presentation of Net.Futurism
- Section 2: Country Surveys
- Ukrainian Futurism: Re-Appropriating the Imperial Legacy
- Section 3: Futurism Studies
- Quicksands of Typography: The Futurist Experience in Central Europe during the 1920s
- “Marinetti is foreign to us”: Polish Responses to Italian Futurism, 1917–1923
- The Reception of Futurism in Nyugat and in the Kassák Circle of Activists
- “A spectre is haunting Europe – the spectre of Futurism”: The Ukrainian Panfuturists and Their Artistic Allegiances
- Futurism: The Hidden Face of the Czech Avant-garde
- Aesthetic Affinities and Political Divergences Between Italian and Romanian Futurism
- Zenitism / Futurism: Similarities and Differences
- Latvian Modernists in Berlin and Rome in the 1920s: Encounters with secondo futurismo
- Anton Podbevšek, Futurism, and Slovenian Interwar Avant-garde Literature
- Enlisting and Updating: Ruggero Vasari and the Shifting Coordinates of Futurism in Eastern and Central Europe
- H2SO4: The Futurist Experience in Georgia
- The Hybrid Artistic Identity: Nicolay Diulgheroff and the Second Phase of the Italian Futurist Movement
- Marinetti’s Visits to Budapest, 1931, 1932 and 1933: Archival Documents and the Memoirs of Margit Gáspár
- Section 4: Bibliography
- Conferences Held on the Occasion of the Centenary of Futurism
- A Bibliography of Publications Commemorating 100 Years of Futurism
- Section 5: Back Matter
- List of Illustrations and Provenance Descriptions
- Notes on Contributors
- Name Index
- Subject Index
- Geographical Index
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Editorial: Aims and Functions of the International Yearbook of Futurism Studies
- Section 1: Critical responses to exhibitions, conferences and publications
- The Centenary of Futurism: Lame Duck or Political Revisionism?
- FUTURISM 2009. Critical Reflections on the Centenary Year
- A short presentation of Net.Futurism
- Section 2: Country Surveys
- Ukrainian Futurism: Re-Appropriating the Imperial Legacy
- Section 3: Futurism Studies
- Quicksands of Typography: The Futurist Experience in Central Europe during the 1920s
- “Marinetti is foreign to us”: Polish Responses to Italian Futurism, 1917–1923
- The Reception of Futurism in Nyugat and in the Kassák Circle of Activists
- “A spectre is haunting Europe – the spectre of Futurism”: The Ukrainian Panfuturists and Their Artistic Allegiances
- Futurism: The Hidden Face of the Czech Avant-garde
- Aesthetic Affinities and Political Divergences Between Italian and Romanian Futurism
- Zenitism / Futurism: Similarities and Differences
- Latvian Modernists in Berlin and Rome in the 1920s: Encounters with secondo futurismo
- Anton Podbevšek, Futurism, and Slovenian Interwar Avant-garde Literature
- Enlisting and Updating: Ruggero Vasari and the Shifting Coordinates of Futurism in Eastern and Central Europe
- H2SO4: The Futurist Experience in Georgia
- The Hybrid Artistic Identity: Nicolay Diulgheroff and the Second Phase of the Italian Futurist Movement
- Marinetti’s Visits to Budapest, 1931, 1932 and 1933: Archival Documents and the Memoirs of Margit Gáspár
- Section 4: Bibliography
- Conferences Held on the Occasion of the Centenary of Futurism
- A Bibliography of Publications Commemorating 100 Years of Futurism
- Section 5: Back Matter
- List of Illustrations and Provenance Descriptions
- Notes on Contributors
- Name Index
- Subject Index
- Geographical Index