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Georges Bataille (1897-1962) - pseudonyms: Lord Auch, Pierre Angélique, Louis Trente

 

French essayist, philosophical theorist and novelist, often called the "metaphysician of evil." Bataille was interested in sex, death, degradation, and the power and potential of the obscene. He rejected traditional literature and considered that the ultimate aim of all intellectual, artistic, or religious activity should be the annihilation of the rational individual in a violent, transcendental act of communion. Roland Barthes, Julia Kristeva, and Philippe Sollers have all written enthusiastically about his work.

"Blameless, shameless. The more desperate the eroticism, the more hopelessly women show off their heavy breasts, opening their mouths and screaming out, the greater the attraction. In contrast, a promise of light awaits at the limits of the mystical outlook. I find this unbearable and soon returned to insolence and erotic vomit - which doesn't respect anybody or anything. How sweet to enter filthy night and proudly wrap myself in it. The whore I went with was as uncomplicated as a child and she hardly talked. There was another one, who came crashing down from a tabletop - sweet, shy, heartbreakingly tender, as I watched her with drunken, unfeeling eyes." (from Guilty, 1988)

Georges Bataille was born in Billon, Puy-de-Dôme, in central France. Bataille had a terrible childhood. His mother attempted suicide several times, but none of her desperate acts succeeded. Bataille loved his father, who became blind and suffered from general paralysis due to syphilis, and died in 1915. On the eve of World War I, Bataille converted to Catholicism. In 1916-17 he served in the army, but was discharged because of tuberculosis. Ill health troubled Bataille all his life, and he suffered from periods of depression.

In 1917 Bataille joined the seminary at Saint-Fleur with the intention of becoming a priest. He spent a period with the Benedictine congregation at Quarr, on the Isle of Wright. A few years later Bataille experienced a loss of faith. From 1918 to 1922 he studied at the École des Chartres in Paris. His thesis dealt with thirteenth century verse. In 1922 he received a fellowship at the School of Advanced Hispanic Studies in Madrid.

In the 1920 Bataille was involved with the Surrealist movement, but he called himself the "enemy from within." He was officially excommunicated from its inner circles by André Breton, who accused him of splintering the movement. In the same decade Bataille started to write after a liberating period of psychoanalysis. He founded and edited many journals that revealed his interests in sociology, religion, and literature. Bataille was the first to publish such thinkers as Barthes, Foucault and Derrida. He edited Documents (1929-31), and in 1935 he co-founded with André Breton the anti-Fascist group Contre-Attaque. In 1934 Bataille met Pierre Klossowski, with whom he shared a similar interest in psychoanalysis and aesthetics. To explore the manifestation of the sacred in society he, in 1939, co-founded with Michel Leiris and Roger Caillois the short-lived Collège de Sociologie. It was closely associated with a secret society which published the Acéphale review.

Between the years 1922 and 1944, Bataille was a librarian and a deputy keeper at Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris. In the evenings Bataille changed his role and became known as a regular visitor of bordellos. This habit caused him troubles at work. He resigned in 1944 because of tuberculosis, two years earlier he had moved to Vézelay, where he was eventually to be buried. During the Occupation Bataille traveled restlessly between Paris and provincial France, and produced some of his major essays, including L'Éxpérience intérieure (1943), Le Coupable (1944), and Sur Nietzsche (1945). In 1946 he founded one of the most respected scholarly journals in France, Critique.

After the war Bataille was unemployed for a long time and his financial situation was rapaidly going downhill. In 1947 he lectured at the Collegè Philosophique and edited a series of books for the publishers Minuit. From 1949 to 1951 he worked as a librarian in Carpentras in Provence, and from 1951 in Orléans. In 1961 Pablo Picasso, Max Ernst and Juan Miro arranged an auction of paintings to help him in his difficulties. Bataille died in Paris on July 8, 1962. At that time he was ready to return back to the Bibliothèque Nationale.

The Tears of Eros (1961) was Bataille's final book, an excursion in the history of eroticism and violence from the Aurignacian era to modern times. Bataille started to write it in 1959, but his declining physical strength, lapses in memory, and the arrest of his eldest daughter for her political activities for Algeria slowed down the work. In its foreword Bataille confessed: "In the violence of overcoming, in the disorder of my laughter and my sobbing, in the excess of raptures that shatter me, I seize on the similarity between a horror and a voluptuousness that goes beyond me, between an ultimate pain and an unbearable joy!" In the last chapter he wrote about the Chinese torture and presented photographs of an ecstatic man who is cut to hundred pieces. The strange, exalted facial expression of the man fascinated Bataille: "I have never stopped being obsessed by the image of this pain," he said. André Malraux, who was Minister of State for Cultural Affairs, condemned the book.

Bataille was twice married, first with the actress Silvia Maklès; they divorced in 1934. Among Silvia's credits were roles in films by Renoir and Carné. She also played in Renoir's Une partie de compagne (1936), in which Bataille appeared as a country priest. Later Silvia married the French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan. Bataille also had a liaison with "Laurie" (Colette Peignot, who died in 1938). In 1946 Bataille married Diane de Beauharnais; they had one daughter.

Histoire de l'oeil (1928, The Story of the Eye), Le Bleu du ciel (1945, Blue of Noon), and L'abbé C (1950, The Abbot C.) are among Bataille's best-known glorifications of eroticism. He felt that sexual union causes a momentary indistinguishability between otherwise distinct objects. The secret of eroticism opened visions into unknowable continuity of being, the death. Poetry has similar dimensions when it dissolves the reader "into the strange." Pornography was for Bataille the vehicle for his own surrealist experiments and memory - this also partly explains complex associations of eggs and eyes.

The Story of the Eye, a classic of erotic literature, was written in 1928 under the pseudonym Lord Auch. It told a tale of a young couple, Simone and the narrator, who explore the boundaries of sexual taboos. They play with eggs, milk and all bodily fluids. During a champagne orgy, their friend Marcelle is left in a wardrobe. She becomes traumatized and is taken to a sanatorium. After she is brought back she hangs herself in the same wardrobe. Simone and 'the Cardinal', the narrator, escape to Spain, where their sexual fantasies become more blasphemous. "I was not even satisfied with the usual debauchery, because the only thing it dirties is debauchery itself, while, in some way or other, anything sublime and perfectly pure is left intact by it. My kind of debauchery soils not only my body and my thoughts, but also anything I may conceive in its course, that is to say, the vast starry universe, which merely serves as a backdrop." In one scene of the book the heroine strangles her partner to force sexual arousal on him. Later the Japanese director Nagisa Oshima used similar climax in his ritualistic film In the Realm of the Senses (1976), which was based on an actual criminal case in the 1930s Japan. - The Story of the Eye has enjoyed a cult status. Most recently it was rediscovered by the Icelandic pop singer Björk Guðdmundsdóttir.

Blue of Noon was set against the backdrop of General Strike in Spain and nascent German Nazism. The protagonist, Troppmann, sways between two women, Lazare, a young Communist, and Dorothea or 'Dirty.' Troppmann is almost always drunk, he is a manic, nihilist dreamer. Eventually he leaves Germany with Dorothea, they copulate in a graveyard and watch a band of Hitler Youth playing marching songs. Eyes appear again in the text: "My eyes were no longer lost among the stars that were shining above me actually, but in the blue of the noon sky. I shut them so as to lose myself in that bright blueness."

"The actions of religious sacrifice and of erotic fusion, in which the subject seeks to be 'loosed from its relatedness to the I' and to make room for re-established 'continuity of Being', are exemplary for him. Bataille, too, pursues the traces of a primordial force that could heal the discontinuity or rift between the rationally disciplined world of work and the outlawed other of reason. He imagines this overpowering return to a lost continuity as the eruption of elements opposed to reason, as a breathtaking act of self-de-limiting. In this process of dissolution, the monadically closed-off subjectivity of self-assertive and mutually objectifying individuals is dispossessed and cast down into the abyss." (Jürgen Habermas in Philosophical Discourse of Modernity, 1987)

Friedrich Nietzsche's work influenced Bataille deeply, and such figures as Sade and Gilles de Rais. The latter was a 15th-century serial killer whose victims were young children. Bataille's views about social organization were influenced by anthropologist Marcel Mauss' The Gift. In La part maudite (1949) he dealt with the phenomenon of waste in nature and society. Although Bataille could write clearly he was many times content to present his ideas in a puzzling way.

For further reading: Georges Bataille and the Mysticism of Sin by Peter Tracey Connor (2000); Georges Bataille by Roland A. Champagne (1999); Bataille: A Critical Reader, ed. by Fred Botting and Scott Wilson (1998); On Bataille: Critical Essays, ed. by Leslie Anne Boldt-Irons (1995); Georges Bataille: A Bibliography by Joan Nordquist (1994); Bataille: Writing the Sacred, ed. by Carolyn Bailey Gill (1995); Georges Bataille by Michael Richardson (1994); Eroticism in Georges Bataille and Henry Miller by Gilles Mayne (1993); The Taste for Annihilation: Georges Bataille and Violent Nihilism by Nick Land (1992); Georges Bataille, la mort à l'oeuvre by Michel Surya (1992); Passion and Excess: Blanchot, Bataille, and Literary Theory by Steven Shaviro (1990); Yale French Studies issue on Bataille, 78 (1990); Against Architecture: The Writings of Georges Bataille by Denis Hollier (1989); Beyond the Gift: Reading Georges Bataille by Michèle Richman (1982); Vers une rèvolution culturelle: Artaud, Bataille, ed. by P. Sollers (1973); L'entretien infini by M. Blanchot (1969); L'Arc issue on Bataille, 32 (May 1967); Critique issue on Bataille (August-September 1963) - See also: Georges Bataille ; Georges Bataille: Biographical Notes - Huom.: Bataillelta on suomennettu mm. Noidan oppipoika, kirjoituksia 1920-luvulta 1950-luvulle (1998)

Selected works:

  • Histoire de l'oeil, 1928 - The Story of the Eye - Silmän tarina
  • L'anus solaire, 1931
  • Sacrifices, 1936
  • Madame Edwarda, 1937 - Madame Edwarda
  • L'Expérience intérieure, 1943 - The Inner Experience
  • Le Coupable, 1944 - The Guilty
  • Dirty, 1945
  • Le Bleu du ciel, 1945 - Blue of Noon
  • Sur Nietzsche, 1945 - On Nietzsche (trans. by Bruce Boone)
  • L'Orestie, 1945
  • Dianus, 1947
  • L'Alleluiah, 1947
  • La haine de la poésie, 1947
  • La Part maudite, 1947 - The Accursed Share
  • Histoire des rats, 1948
  • Théorie de la religion, 1948 - Theory of Religion (trans. by Robert Hurley)
  • Éponine, 1949
  • L'abbé C, 1950 - The Abbot C.
  • Somme athéologique I-II, 1954-61
  • Lascaux, ou, La Naissance de l'art, 1955 - Lascaux; or, The Birth of Art
  • Manet, 1955
  • L'Érotisme ou la muse en question de l'être, 1957 - Eroticism: Death and Sensuality
  • La Littérature et le mal, 1957 - Literature and Evil (trans. by Alastair Hamilton)
  • Les Larmes d'Éros, 1961 - The Tears of Eros (trans. by Peter Connor)
  • L'impossible, 1962 - The Impossible (trans. by Robert Hurley)
  • Le petit, 1963
  • Gilles de Rais, 1965 -The Trial of Gilles de Rais
  • Ma mère, 1966 - My Mother
  • La notion de dépense, 1967
  • Le mort, 1967
  • La Pratique de la joie avant la mort, 1967
  • L'Archangélique, 1967
  • Documents, 1968
  • Œuvres complètes, 1970-88 (12 vols.)
  • Le Collège de sociologie (1937-1939), 1979 - The College of Sociology (1937-1939)
  • Visions of Excess, 1985
  • La Dictionnaire critique, 1993 - Encyclopaedia Acephalica: Comprising the Critical Dictionary & Related Texts
  • The Absence of Myth, 1994
  • My Mother, Madame Edwarda and the Dead Man
  • Collected Poetry, 1998


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