
In Our Time Dadaism
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Apr 16, 2026 Dawn Ades, Emeritus Professor of Art History, maps Dada’s spread and legacy. Ruth Hemus, Professor of French and Visual Culture, explores language, performance, and photomontage. Stephen Forcer, Professor of French, examines Zurich origins, sound poetry, and political context. They discuss Cabaret Voltaire performances, antiwar absurdity, photomontage, Duchamp’s Fountain, and how Dada evolved across cities.
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Dada As Dialectical Negation
- Dada intentionally resisted definition and sometimes presented itself as dialectical negativity: yes equals no.
- Dawn Ades and Stephen Forcer describe manifestos that provoke rather than prescribe, mixing cancellation with renewal.
Chance Collage And Photomontage Legacy
- Dada introduced techniques like chance-based collage and photomontage that became influential beyond the movement.
- Dawn Ades notes Arp's torn-paper chance collages while Ruth Hemus highlights Hannah Höch's political photomontages.
Dada Poetry Is Intentionally Poetic
- Dadaist poetry is experimental but still poetic: it uses meter, rhyme and deliberate correction.
- Stephen Forcer shows manuscripts where Tzara edits nonsense syllables and employs anaphora and meter.


















