Surrealism Timeline
How It All Went Down
1914-1918: World War I
War sweeps through Europe and millions of soldiers and civilians lose their lives. It's so devastating that it doesn't feel real—it feels sur-real.
1917: The poet Guillaume Apollinaire coins the term "Surrealism"
Apollinaire uses the term "Surrealism" to describe a ballet performance in 1917. Breton went on to steal the term and used it to describe his budding literary movement. What a thief.
1919: André Breton, Phillipe Soupault, and Louis Aragon found the journal Littérature
Littérature would become a platform for Surrealist writers, many of whom published their trippy poems and texts in the journal.
1920: André Breton and Phillipe Soupault publish The Magnetic Fields
It's the first important Surrealist work to be published, and it gets its readers' heads spinning.
1924: André Breton publishes The First Manifesto of Surrealism
This manifesto, which defines the aims and goals of the movement, officially kicks off the Surrealist movement.
1924: The journal La Revolution Surrealiste is founded
This journal replaces Littérature, the original literary journal of the Surrealists. It's not just about Surrealism anymore; it's about the Surrealist Revolution.
1925: Robert Desnos publishes Mourning for Mourning
All the other Surrealists are jealous of Desnos' amazing talent for automatic writing, showcased in this collection of writings.
1929: The Second Manifesto of Surrealism is published
By this point, a bunch of the original Surrealists have left or been been kicked out of the group by André Breton.
1930: Robert Desnos and other ex-Surrealists publish the pamphlet Un Cadavre (A Cadaver)
Those ex-Surrealists who have been excommunicated by André Breton don't take things lying down. In this pamphlet, they attack the godfather of Surrealism himself, Breton.
1939-1945: World War II
Uh-oh. War is back in Europe. Big time. A number of Surrealist and ex-Surrealist writers join the anti-Nazi Resistance movement in France.