Lettrism is a French avant-garde movement, established in 1946 by the publication of the Lettrist Manifesto by Isidore Isou in Paris.[1]

Lettrism is also the Hurufi movement (Arabic: حروفية‎ meaning "letters") which was lead by Fażlu l-Lāh Astar-Ābādī, also called Nāimī (1340–1394) and which spread in areas of western Persia, Anatolia and Azerbaijan.[2]

Also see Hurufiyah or Huruffiya


Practices


Movement/organisation People Period Places Publications Practices
Hurufi Movement
  • Naimi
  • Nasimi
Lettrist Movement
  • Isou
  • Debord
1946
  • The Youth Front
  • Lettrist Dictatorship
Lettrist International
  • Debord
  • Bernstein
  • Wolman
Potlatch psychogeography
Second Lettrist International
  • Wolman
Ultra Lettrists
  • Villeglé
  • Dufrêne
  • Estivals
/grâmmeS
  • cry-rhythmns
  • decollage
New Lettrist International
DAMTP CLASS
  • DAMTP Newspaper
  • DessaKalaPatra
  • Situnionism

Superceded by

Situationism


References

Search for Lettrism on Wikipedia.
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