3/22/12

Bruno Jasieński - An exquisite example of literary Futurism and Catastrophism, the novel presents a filthy, degenerated world where factories and machines have replaced the human and economic relationships have turned just about everyone into a prostitute





Bruno Jasieński, I Burn Paris, Trans. by Soren A. Gauger & Marcin Piekoszewski, Twisted Spoon Press, 2012.


"I Burn Paris has remained one of Poland's most uncomfortable masterstrokes of literature since its initial and controversial serialization by Henri Barbusse in 1928 in L'Humanité (for which Jasienski was deported for disseminating subversive literature). It tells the story of a disgruntled factory worker who, finding himself on the streets, takes the opportunity to poison Paris's water supply. With the deaths piling up, we encounter Chinese communists, rabbis, disillusioned scientists, embittered Russian émigrés, French communards and royalists, American millionaires and a host of others as the city sections off into ethnic enclaves and everyone plots their route of escape. At the heart of the cosmopolitan city is a deep-rooted xenophobia and hatred — the one thread that binds all these groups together. As Paris is brought to ruin, Jasienski issues a rallying cry to the downtrodden of the world, mixing strains of "The Internationale" with a broadcast of popular music. ith its montage strategies reminiscent of early avant-garde cinema and fist-to-the-gut metaphors, I Burn Paris has lost none of its vitality and vigor. Ruthlessly dissecting various utopian fantasies, Jasienski is out to disorient, and he has a seemingly limitless ability to transform the Parisian landscape into the product of disease-addled minds. An exquisite example of literary Futurism and Catastrophism, the novel presents a filthy, degenerated world where factories and machines have replaced the human and economic relationships have turned just about everyone into a prostitute. Yet rather than cliché and simplistic propaganda, there is an immediacy to the writing, and the modern metropolis is starkly depicted as only superficially cosmopolitan, as hostile and animalistic at its core.
This English translation of I Burn Paris fills a major gap in the availability of works from the interwar Polish avant-garde, an artistic phenomenon receiving growing attention with recent publications such as Caviar and Ashes."

"Jasienski's novel is, after all, primarily a fantastical one, combining the two most critical elements of social literature in those restless times: Catastrophism and the belief in a miracle — in this case, the miracle of the Revolution. ... We are affected by this visionary fantasy with the extreme, sometimes even brutal realism of its texture, its innovative literary form, and the ambitious courage of its concept. Above all, however, the novel grips us with its eternal — forever old and forever new — story of the human heart that dreams of a better tomorrow." — Anatol Stern

"This is a superb text of astonishing modernity, a veritable manifesto of the wretched of the earth." — Marianne

Excerpt


Translator's Afterword


Anatol Stern's 1957 Preface




Bruno Jasieński, The Mannequins' Ball, Trans. by Daniel Gerould, Routledge, 2000.


"This play, by Futurist poet Bruno Jasienski, is an outstanding example of the joining of left-wing politics and avant-garde interest in human mechanization that characterized the experimental theatre of Poland in the inter-war years.
Stalinism and the purges cut short Jasienski's career and prevented productions of his play for many years - except for a brilliant constructivist staging in Prague in 1933. The Mannequins' Ball can now take its place along with Capek's R.U.R. as one of the major twentieth-century dramas making use of the themes and techniques of human automata.
Reproduced in this volume are the eight woodcuts by Moor which accompanied the original Moscow publication in 1931."



Bruno Jasieński, The Legs of Izolda Morgan & Other Body Parts, Trans. by Soren A. Gauger & Guy Torr, Twisted Spoon Press, forthcoming 2013.

"The Legs of Izolda Morgan, published as a separate volume in 1923, is the finest example of Polish Futurism in prose. The present volume includes the complete version plus a selection of the manifestoes and Futurist texts that preceded and followed it, placing it in the proper context. Also included are two satirical grotesque tales from Jasienski's later Soviet period.
Contents:
To the Polish Nation : A Manifesto on the Immediate Futurization of Life (1921)
Nife in the Gutt (1921)
The Legs of Izolda Morgan (incl. "Exposé") (1923)
Polish Futurism (A Summmation) (1923)
The Nose (1936)
The Chief Culprit (1936)

"In The Legs of Izolda Morgan machines are pictured as creatures that can work, move, even kill, while people are portrayed as some kind of apparatus whose body can be dismembered into parts without showing the effects of organic decay. The underlying intention of the tale's plot is to show that the violent intervention of machines in human life undermines the accepted premises on which the categories of being alive and being human have conventionally been based. The story thus illustrates the reciprocal contamination of previously clearly distinct categories of human and mechanical. The story also maintains that this happens as a result of people's fascination with the external, purely material nature of life, which leads them to misinterpret the essence underlying the categories of human and mechanical. At the same time the story neither points out, nor even attempt to specify the essential qualities that differentiate people from machines. As a result, the dehumanized world, obsessed in the same degree with machines as it is obsessed with the body ... instills in us fear of such life as portrayed in the story, and in order to overcome this fear one needs to look for such qualities in oneself that would enable one to retain one's humanness intact. Jasienski seems to encourage in his readers the quest for such qualities." — Agatha Krzychylkiewicz


"Bruno Jasieński
Poet, novelist, playwright, Futurist, Catastrophist, Bruno Jasienski was born Wiktor Bruno Zysman on July 17, 1901 in Klimontów, a provincial town near Sandomierz, Poland. His father, a local doctor and social worker, was Jewish, but later converted to Protestantism to be able to marry Bruno's mother, who was Catholic. After attending school in Warsaw, Jasienski lived with his family in Moscow between 1914-1918 and graduated from the city's Mikolaj Rej Gymnasium. While here he also came into contact with the literary avant-garde and Futurism. Returning to Poland in 1918, he briefly studied Polish Literature at Kraków's Jagiellonian University and became active in the Polish avant-garde. With the poet Stanislaw Mlodozeniec (1895-1959) and the poet/painter Tytus Czyzewski (1880-1946) he founded the Kraków Futurist group Katarynka (Barrel Organ). The name was meant to suggest the "low art" of the common person and identify these artists with anti-elitist trends in Polish society. To Jasienski, the new poetry should provide an alternative to the literary establishment's outmoded poetic tropes, which he saw as bearing no relation to modern society. This began his output of manifestos, leaflets, in addition to a poetry that was uncommon in Poland at that time. With the Warsaw Futurists, centered around Anatol Stern (1899-1968) and Aleksander Wat (1900-1967), he organized public "happenings" around the country.
Considered the enfant terrible of Polish literature by this time and lauded by critics throughout the country, Jasienski in 1923 suddenly declared the end of Futurism in Poland. During that same year he witnessed a major workers' rebellion in Kraków and decided to join the Polish Communist movement, giving public lectures on Marxist philosophy and discussing revolutionary strategies for class struggle. Persecuted by the police, he and his wife, Klara, moved to France in 1925, where they worked as journalists and correspondents for various Polish newspapers. There he formed an amateur theater for Polish workers living in Saint Denis and wrote numerous poems, essays, and books, many of radical bent. He also became an active member of the French Communist Party and spent many hours in libraries researching historical materials on the Peasant Uprising of 1848 led by Jakub Szela in addition to research on Polish folklore and folk songs. The result was The Tale of Jakub Szela, one of his most important poems.
When Paul Morand's (who would later collaborate with the Nazis) short anti-Semitic and anti-Soviet satire, "I Burn Moscow," appeared in Paris, Jasienski responded with his Futurist-Catastrophist novel I Burn Paris, published in French translaton by l'Humanité and immediately translated into Russian (the first Russian edition of 130,000 copies sold out in one day) and published in Polish. This got him deported from France in 1929 on grounds of disseminating dangerous political propaganda. After a short stint in Germany, he emigrated to the Soviet Union and was given high positions in the Communist Party's literary departments, the Union of Soviet Writers, and made editor-in-chief of Kultura mas (Mass Culture), a Polish-language monthly. He soon divorced his wife, who allegedly had an affair with Genrikh Yagoda, head of the NKVD.
Jasienski began to write in Russian and in 1931 completed his first and only play The Mannequins' Ball as well as a few collections of stories and one novel, Man Changes His Skin (1934). By now he was a strong supporter of Yagoda's purges within the literary community, and according to Aleksander Wat, he was active in the campaign against Isaac Babel. Yet in 1937 Yagoda himself was arrested and soon afterward Klara was arrested and executed. Having lost his protector, Jasienski was expelled from the Party, put on trial, and sentenced to fifteen years in the gulag. Thought to have died in transit some time in 1939, it is now believed he was executed on September 17, 1938 in Moscow's Butyrka prison.
His second wife, Anna Berzin, was arrested the following year and spent 17 years in various Soviet gulags. Jasienski's son was stripped of his identity and sent to an orphanage, but managed to escape during World War II. After the war he went on to become a prominent figure in Russia's criminal underworld. Eventually discovering his true heritage, he took a Polish name and became active in various illegal organizations in opposition to the Communist regime. He was killed in the 1970s.
An annual Brunonalia Festival is held in Jasienski's honor in Klimontów." - www.twistedspoon.com

Bruno Jasieński: his evolution from futurism to socialist realism by Nina Kolesnikoff
Read it at Google Books

 

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