Description
The Tribe is a rare, vivid tour of a moment and milieu barely noticed at the time by the tourists who flocked to the Left Bank for a glimpse of Sartre & Co. The rich iconography includes many of Ed van der Elsken's celebrated photographs of "the tribe" and a trove of Letterist leaflets and posters.
Between 1952 and 1953, Mension haunted Saint-Germain-des Pres as a member of the legendary Lettrist International; direct progenitor of the Situationist International. In "The Tribe" Mension recounts this vie de Boheme, whiled away with Guy Debord and an assortment of hard drinkers and thinkers.
About the Author
Jean-Michel Mension (b. 1934) misspent his youth in Saint- Germain-des-Pres in the early 1950s before joining the Communist Party in 1962 and the Ligue Communiste in 1968. The Tribe is Mension's first book; he recently published his second, Le Temps gage: aventures politiques et artistiques d'un irregular a Paris.
Reviews
The Tribe relates the Parisian wanderings of a heterogeneous group of individuals who cultivated laziness and revolt, alcohol and talk, drift and chance, creative hopes and encounters ... in the quest of a Rimbaldian derangement of the senses, of detournement of art and daily life by the defiance of order, by vandalism, be delinquency, but also by an altogether contemporary quest for a supersession of Marxism. * Le Monde libertaire *
Book Information
ISBN 9781859843949
Author Jean-Michel Mension
Format Paperback
Page Count 136
Imprint Verso Books
Publisher Verso Books
Weight(grams) 210g
Dimensions(mm) 228mm * 151mm * 9mm