A cofounder of Dada and its enfant terrible, Walter Serner, whose
demeanor has been called "a dance on the rim of a volcano," was a
brilliant observer of society. His Last Loosening: A Dada Manifesto
was penned in 1918 and published in 1920. Slightly revised later as he
became disgusted with Dada, it forms the first part of this volume, its
philosophical foundation. It presents a playful "moral codex" to subvert
the illusions and stereotypes underpinning society's views on morality
and decency, attacking the contradictions between appearance and
reality. The volume's second part, "The Handbook of Practices," was
written in Geneva in 1927 and offers a practical guide in gnomic prose
for the modern amoralist, the con man. A cynical vision to be sure,
Serner has set out a list of precepts to arm us in a world where boredom
prevails and nothing but self-interest is a motivator, in his view a
shameless, bigoted world wallowing in an orgy of narcissism, where it is
either fool or be fooled. His smugness and indifference, his "Jesuit
snobbery" as one critic called it, gave his work an explosive force that
was unsurpassed by his contemporaries.