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The Central Laboratory

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When Max Jacob published The Central Laboratory in 1921, the artistic landscape in Paris was in flux, with Cubism waning, Dada officially over, and Surrealism yet to emerge. Jacob's work captures this transitional moment, presenting a modern yet disjointed collection that defies traditional genres. It features a mix of operettas, folk songs, nonsense poetry, and playful puns, often prioritizing sound over meaning. Jacob shifts effortlessly between societal critique and mystical sincerity, remaining loyal only to his unique style. He employs symbolist references, cubist perspectives, Dadaist discontinuity, and a dreamlike logic that contrasts sharply with the emerging Surrealism. Drawing from nearly twenty years of creative exploration, Jacob crafts an array of "stoppered phials" in this tongue-in-cheek laboratory, each humorously mislabeled. The work exemplifies what Jacob termed his "art of disappointment," where reader expectations are subverted, leading to doubt and disorientation as poetic principles. Mixed signals and mocked allegory create a camp sensibility, reflecting the contradictions of Jacob's own life. A century after its French publication, the book remains an intriguing and peculiar work, overshadowed by Jacob's more renowned contemporaries and earlier writings. Jacob himself noted that it encapsulates two decades of experiences and styles.

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The Central Laboratory, Max Jacob

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2022
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