For me, it's Ghérasim Luca.
For me, it's Carl Schmitt.
For me, it's myself.
>>9150294
What did Luca write about? Did he write just poetry? He sounds like an interesting figure and many French intellectuals at the time appreciated him and other French-Romanians, but Luca rarely gets mentioned, unlike Tzara, Cioran, Ionesco, etc.
>> 9150368
No, he wrote a lot of works in prose. Well, /lit/ does not talk about him here because /lit/ is pretty much a illiteracy board, believe me. Tristan gets mentioned because >Dadaísmo. Outside that, poets who don't belong to the english curriculum are pretty unknown around here.
About Luca, his poetry is so fucking good. Try it. In french, please. Its plain and easy. He did inspired the "anti-oedipus" idea of Deleuze. He wrote a manifest about a non-edipian life in the 30s.
>>9150368
No, he wrote a lot of works in prose. Well, /lit/ does not talk about him here because /lit/ is pretty much a illiteracy board, believe me. Tristan gets mentioned because >Dadaísmo. Outside that, poets who don't belong to the english curriculum are pretty unknown around here.
About Luca, his poetry is so fucking good. Try it. In french, please. Its plain and easy. He inspired the "anti-oedipus" idea of Deleuze. He wrote a manifest about a non-edipian life in the 30s.
>>9150538
Thanks anon! I'll be honest, I only really paid attention to him because Deleuze mentioned him repeatedly, but I didn't say it because Deleuze is already talked about too much on /lit/ and will probably become a meme. Not like he doesn't deserve it, he is, as another anon put it, "/lit/ af".