{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Context XXI","provider_url":"http:\/\/contextxxi.org","title":"The Bitter Victory of Surrealism\n","author_name":"Guy-Ernest&nbsp;Debord \u25aa \nReuben&nbsp;Keehan (translation)","width":"1200","height":"800","url":"https:\/\/licra.contextxxi.org\/the-bitter-victory-of-surrealism.html","html":"\u003Ch4 class='title'\u003E\u003Ca href='https:\/\/licra.contextxxi.org\/the-bitter-victory-of-surrealism.html'\u003EThe Bitter Victory of Surrealism\n\u003C\/a\u003E\u003C\/h4\u003E\u003Cblockquote class='spip'\u003EThe very success of surrealism has a lot to do with the fact that the most modern side of this society&#8217;s ideology has renounced a strict heirarchy of factitious values and openly uses the irrational, including vestiges of surrealism. Report on the Construction of Situations, June 1957\n\n\u003Cbr \/\u003ESurrealism is a success \u2014 but only in the context of a world that has yet to be fundamentally transformed. Having expected nothing less than the overthrow of the dominant social order, this success has&nbsp;\u003Ca href=\"..\/the-bitter-victory-of-surrealism.html\" class=' pts_suite'\u003E(...)\u003C\/a\u003E\u003C\/blockquote\u003E\n"}