Visions of Excess: Selected Writings, 1927-1939

Portada
U of Minnesota Press, 1985 - 271 páginas
Since the publication of Visions of Excess in 1985, there has been an explosion of interest in the work of Georges Bataille. The French surrealist continues to be important for his groundbreaking focus on the visceral, the erotic, and the relation of society to the primeval. This collection of prewar writings remains the volume in which Batailles’s positions are most clearly, forcefully, and obsessively put forward.This book challenges the notion of a “closed economy” predicated on utility, production, and rational consumption, and develops an alternative theory that takes into account the human tendency to lose, destroy, and waste. This collection is indispensible for an understanding of the future as well as the past of current critical theory.Georges Bataille (1897-1962), a librarian by profession, was founder of the French review Critique. He is the author of several books, including Story of the Eye, The Accused Share, Erotism, and The Absence of Myth.
 

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Contenido

Dream
3
The Language of Flowers
10
Eye
17
The Lugubrious Game
24
Formless
31
Base Materialism and Gnosticism
45
The Deviations of Nature
53
Mouth
59
Sacrifices
130
The Psychological Structure of Fascism
137
Popular Front in the Street
161
The Labyrinth
171
The Sacred Conspiracy
178
Propositions
197
The Obelisk
213
The Sorcerers Apprentice
223

The Jesuve
73
The Pineal Eye
79
The Use Value of D A F de Sade
91
The Critique of the Foundations of the Hegelian Dialectic
105
The Notion of Expenditure
116
The Practice of Joy before Death
235
The College of Sociology
246
A Commentary on the Texts
257
Index
267
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Acerca del autor (1985)

Georges Bataille was a French poet, novelist, and philosopher. He was born in Billon, Puy-de-Dome, in central France on September 10, 1897. His father was already blind and paralyzed from syphilis when Bataille was born. In 1915, Bataille's father died, his mind destroyed by his illness. The death marked his son for life. While working at the Bibliotheque National in Paris during the 1920s, Bataille underwent psychoanalysis and became involved with some of the intellectuals in the Surrealist movement, from whom he learned the concept of incongruous imagery in art. In 1946 he founded the journal Critique, which published the early work of some of his contemporaries in French intellectual life, including Roland Barthes and Jacques Derrida. Bataille believed that in the darkest moments of human existence-in orgiastic sex and terrible death-lay ultimate reality. By observing them and even by experiencing them, actually in sex and vicariously in death, he felt that one could come as close as possible to fully experiencing life in all its dimensions. Bataille's works include The Naked Beast at Heaven's Gate (1956), A Tale of Satisfied Desire (1953), Death and Sensuality: A Study of Eroticism and the Taboo (1962), and The Birth of Art: Prehistoric Painting (1955). Bataille died in Paris on July 8, 1962.

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