Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q252299> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 78 of
78
with 100 triples per page.
- Q252299 subject Q11703722.
- Q252299 subject Q16785945.
- Q252299 subject Q7368512.
- Q252299 subject Q8305653.
- Q252299 subject Q8359259.
- Q252299 subject Q8633855.
- Q252299 abstract "The cut-up technique (or découpé in French) is an aleatory literary technique in which a text is cut up and rearranged to create a new text. The concept can be traced to at least the Dadaists of the 1920s, but was popularized in the late 1950s and early 1960s by writer William S. Burroughs, and has since been used in a wide variety of contexts.".
- Q252299 wikiPageExternalLink burroughs.html.
- Q252299 wikiPageExternalLink cutupmachine.
- Q252299 wikiPageExternalLink tzara.shtml.
- Q252299 wikiPageExternalLink tristan-tzara-arcade.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q1024747.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q1043197.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q11703722.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q13422881.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q150.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q16409.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q16785945.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q170593.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q174210.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q1755351.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q176640.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q18187012.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q18352683.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q18395660.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q188176.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q188668.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q209714.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q220726.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q2274615.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q256716.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q270641.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q3105539.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q312407.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q3129340.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q3315360.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q37260.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q37767.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q4171564.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q41719.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q44190.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q4706283.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q4777184.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q4819938.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q482.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q4927761.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q5049321.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q5057302.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q5282787.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q5383.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q552780.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q560311.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q581458.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q5982946.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q6034.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q6036747.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q646929.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q655072.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q6651179.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q6812995.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q6946226.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q7091380.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q7205507.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q7368512.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q740036.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q7522011.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q7609884.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q768100.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q7768819.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q795598.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q8305653.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q8359259.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q8446.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q8633855.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q917570.
- Q252299 wikiPageWikiLink Q971694.
- Q252299 comment "The cut-up technique (or découpé in French) is an aleatory literary technique in which a text is cut up and rearranged to create a new text. The concept can be traced to at least the Dadaists of the 1920s, but was popularized in the late 1950s and early 1960s by writer William S. Burroughs, and has since been used in a wide variety of contexts.".
- Q252299 label "Cut-up technique".