Georges Bataille - Literature And Evil Other ... -
In "Literature and Evil," Bataille posits that literature is inherently linked to evil, not in the classical sense of moral reprehensibility, but rather as a transgressive force that challenges societal norms and conventions. He argues that literature's primary function is to subvert the established order, to disrupt the complacent and mundane, and to reveal the darker aspects of human nature. For Bataille, literature is not about conveying moral messages or promoting social cohesion but about unleashing the repressed desires, anxieties, and contradictions that underlie human existence.
Literature and Evil is not a dry philosophical treatise. It is a series of intimate, violent readings of the writers Bataille considered accomplices in transgression. To discuss “Georges Bataille – Literature and Evil” is to walk through this haunted gallery. Georges Bataille - Literature and Evil other ...
Perhaps the most obvious inclusion, Sade represents the ultimate "Sovereign" man. In Bataille's view, Sade’s writing is an attempt to use language to reach a state of total, destructive freedom where the individual no longer answers to any law. In "Literature and Evil," Bataille posits that literature
Bataille distinguishes between two realms of human existence: Literature and Evil is not a dry philosophical treatise
In an age of trigger warnings, content moderation, and the relentless demand for “positive” representation, Bataille’s Literature and Evil is more radical than ever. Our digital culture insists that art must be safe, ethical, and therapeutic. Bataille laughs from the grave.
: Writing is framed as the opposite of work; it is "puerile" but holds a fundamental truth by confronting human nature's most violent aspects. The "Necessary" Danger
The realm of childhood, expenditure, eroticism, and the "Pleasure Principle".