THE NECROPOLIS OF IMAGES

Everything is put into it

“For the head of a crowd is like a pudding en surprise.” - Wyndham Lewis, Time and Western Man, Book I, ch. XIV, p. 67.
Posted by C. Van Carter on 4/18/2007
Labels: THE SECRET OF THE SUCCESS OF CHARLIE CHAPLIN

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Contents

  • ▼  2007 (38)
    • ►  Mar (1)
    • ▼  Apr (13)
      • 1
      • This Obscure Point
      • 2
      • Our incurably romantic outlook
      • 3
      • Returns
      • So dead
      • External nature of the machine age
      • The poor craftsman
      • Brewery and laundry receipts
      • There is nothing so ‘romantic’ as advertisement
      • 4
      • Everything is put into it
    • ►  May (4)
    • ►  Jun (16)
    • ►  Jul (2)
    • ►  Aug (1)
    • ►  Nov (1)
  • † (5)
  • AN ANALYSIS OF THE MIND OF JAMES JOYCE (10)
  • APPENDIX TO BOOK I (4)
  • ART MOVEMENTS AND THE MASS IDEA (3)
  • BELIEF AND REALITY (1)
  • lines that lead nowhere (6)
  • PURE POETRY AND PURE MAGIC (2)
  • ROMANCE AND THE MORALIST MIND (1)
  • SOME OF THE MEANINGS OF ROMANCE (1)
  • THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE INSTRUMENTS OF RESEARCH (1)
  • THE PRINCIPAL ‘REVOLUTIONARY’ TENDENCY OF TO-DAY (4)
  • THE PRINCIPLE OF ADVERTISEMENT (3)
  • THE PROSE-SONG OF GERTRUDE STEIN (1)
  • THE SECRET OF THE SUCCESS OF CHARLIE CHAPLIN (1)

Links

  • Across Difficult Country
  • BLAST
  • The Code of a Herdsman
  • Wyndham Lewis
  • WL's typography
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