PERSIAN SURREALISM
A Study on Surrealism in the Short Story Oldooz and the Crows Written by Iranian Writer Samad Behrangi
Aazam Jahangiri
English Literature, Shoushtar Branch, Islamic Azad University, Shoushtar, Iran.
ABSTRACT
This study attempts to analyze Surrealism in Oldooz and the Crows, a short story written by
the Iranian author Samad Behrangi. Surrealism is a cultural movement founded in 1920s by
the French poet and critic Andre Breton. The surrealists favored in the function of the world
of unconscious mind in integrating fancies and dreams to the phenomenal world in order to
elaborate a higher reality. They also were interested in Freud's theories about unconscious
mind and the power of free imagination especially in Children. Moreover, they insisted on
the automatic writing avoiding regular artistic conventions and restrictive rule. In this
regard, the researcher tries to discuss the imaginative freedom and childhood dreams
propounded in Behrangi's short story Oldooz and the Crows to consider whether this literary
work can be considered as a surrealist work or not.
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