Congratulations to Dr Peter Zusi, Associate Professor of Czech and Comparative Literature at UCL SSEES, who published his book The Integrity of the Avant-Garde: Karel Teige and the Biography of an Ambition (Visual Culture: Vol.2. Legenda: Cambridge, UK, 2024).
The Czech avant-garde art theorist Karel Teige (1900-1951) regarded architecture and film as providing the key to formulating a unified theory that would capture this ‘integrity of the avant-garde’. Teige—whose thought has many points of contact with celebrated figures such as Georg Lukács and Walter Benjamin, and who was a close associate of Le Corbusier, André Breton, and Hannes Meyer—reveals how a vibrant ‘alternative’ avant-garde tradition can raise central questions for understanding European modernism.
The book will explore the following. On what grounds do we speak of ’the avant-garde’ in interwar European culture? Why do we understand the conflicts and quarrels among these diverse movements as expressing a shared attitude—the culture of the manifesto, the drive to reject, to explore, to renew—that trumps the conflicts and quarrels themselves? Why do the stern rationalism of a functionalist building and the irreverent irrationalism of a Dadaist performance seem heralds of a similar spirit?