ŽORŽ BATAJ - KNJIŽEVNOST I ZLO

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ŽORŽ BATAJ - KNJIŽEVNOST I ZLO

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  • Stanje Polovno

ŽORŽ BATAJ

KNJIŽEVNOST I ZLO

Prevod - Ivan Čolović

Izdavač - Beogradski izdavačko-grafički zavod, Beograd

Godina - 1977

212 strana

20 cm

Edicija - Savremeni esej

Povez - Broširan

Stanje - Kao na slici, tekst bez podvlačenja



SADRŽAJ:
Predgovor

EMILI BRONTE
Erotizam je potvrđivanje života i u samoj smrt
Detinjstvo, razum i Zlo
Emili Bronte i prestup
Književnost, sloboda i mističko iskustvo
Značenje Zla

BODLER
Čovek ne može sebe potpuno da voli ako se ne osuđuje
Prozaični svet delanja i svet poezije
Poezija je uvek u izvesnom smislu suprotnost poezije
Bodler i kip nemogućnog
Istorijsko značenje “Cveća zla”

MIŠLE.
Žrtvovanje
Vradžbina i Crna magija
Dobro, Zlo, “Vrednost” i Mišleov život

VILIJEM BLEJK
Život i delo Vilijema Blejka
Suverenost poezije
Tumačenje Blejkove mitologije u svetlosti Jungove psihoanalize
Osvetljavanje Zla. “Venčanje Neba i Pakla”
Blejk i francuska revolucija
SAD
Sad i zauzeće Bastilje
Volja za samouništenjem
Sadova misao
Sadovska mahnitost
Od neobuzdanosti do čiste svesti
Poezija Sadove sudbine

PRUST
Ljubav prema istini i pravdi i socijalizam Marsela Prusta
Moral vezan za prestup moralnog zakona
Uživanje zasnovano na zločinačkom smislu erotizma
Pravda, Istina i Strast

KAFKA
Treba li spaliti Kafku?
Kafka, Obećana zemlja i revolucionarno društvo
Kafka je savršeno detinjast
Odražavanje detinjskog položaja
Veseli svet Franca Kafke
Radosna neobuzdanost deteta ponovo se javlja u porivu suverene slobode smrti
Opravdanje neprijateljskog stava komunista
Ali i Kafka se sa tim slaže

ŽAN ŽENE
Žene i Sartrova studija o njemu
Bezrezervna posvećenost Zlu
Suverenost i svetost Zla
Srozavanje u izdajstvo i odvratno Zlo
Tesnac neograničenog prestupa
Nemogućno opštenje
Ženeov promašaj
Neproduktivno trošenje i feudalno društvo
Sloboda i Zlo
Autentično opštenje, neprozirnost svega “što jeste”i suverenost
Izneverena suverenost

Beleška o piscu


"I first discovered Georges Bataille – the French philosopher who would help define transgressive literature – through Story of the Eye, his groundbreaking 1928 novel that explored teenage eroticism, mental illness, and eggs, among other things. Reading Bataille, enriching as it is, often makes one’s head hurt, as if he’s dealt a blow to your brain that causes it to swell. Rest assured, that sensation is merely your mind expanding against what you’ve been previously taught about human nature.

Like my first taste of blood, nothing else would compare at that time – subsequently, I quickly devoured Visions of Excess and The Impossible. None of it was easy reading (especially with the clunky, often redundant translations that comes with assimilating French) but I relished in reading the lines over and over until I made sure I really got what he was throwing down. And while Story of the Eye altered my life, it would be his book of essays, Literature and Evil, that proved more vital to me, because it actually affirmed it.

The book, in which he uses eight authors as inherent springboards of theory, confirmed my personal trajectory, finessing intuitions I wasn't able to put into words; distilling sweeping concepts into urgent bridges of questions/answers, and most importantly, it gave confidence to my own doomed gravitations.

“Literature is not innocent,” says Bataille in the preface. “It is guilty and should admit itself so.” Elsewhere he states, “Literature cannot assume the task of regulating collective necessity… This is the point of my book. I believe that man is necessarily put up against himself and that he cannot recognize himself and love himself to the end unless he is condemned.”

Within this study, he often quotes Sartre, yet omits authors like him and Lautremont from the thesis on grounds that their work is too obvious, so blatantly oozing with Evil it needs no exploration.

While "Story of the Eye" altered my life, it would be his book of essays, "Literature and Evil," that proved more vital to me, because it actually affirmed it.
What he does with less likely works, such as Emily Bronte’s deceptively romantic Wuthering Heights, is create a thread of similar sentiment to harsher works like de Sade, showing a universal expansion of rebellion, passion, and challenge within literature that could only lead to its condemnation from the religiously dictated/morally-blinded majority, which in turn, only empowers the jagged form.

“How sensual is the act of destruction,” says the executioner in de Sade’s Justine. “I can think of nothing which excites me more deliciously. There is no ecstasy similar to that which we experience when we yield to its divine infamy.” “Had I been born where laws are less strict and tastes less dainty,” says Heathcliff in Wuthering Heights, “I should treat myself to a slow vivisection of those two as an evening’s amusement.”

Elaborating on Bronte, Bataille states: “She had the sort of knowledge which links love not only with clarity but also with violence and death — because death seems to be the truth of love, just as love is the truth of death.” He goes on to further bridge philosophies he laid out in his own book, Erotism. “To reproduce oneself is to disappear… Whether it’s a matter of pure eroticism (love-passion) or of bodily sensuality, the intensity increases to the point where destruction, the death of being, becomes apparent.” “Evil, therefore, if we examine it closely, is not only the dream of the wicked: it is also to some extent the dream of Good.”

When approaching Baudelaire, Bataille quotes Sartre: “He who damns himself acquires a solitude which is a feeble image of the great solitude of the truly free man…” “But who, basically, is Satan?” asks Sartre, “if not the symbol of disobedient and sulky children who want to remain as their parents see them and who do Evil within the bounds of Good in order to assert and consecrate it?)” “The liberty of the child (or the Devil) is evidently limited by the adult (or by God) who turns it to mockery (who diminishes it).”

Back to Bataille’s own perspective, he intuits, “If liberty is the essential quality of poetry, and if free and sovereign behavior deserves no more than a ‘tortured quest,’ the misery of poetry and the bonds imposed by liberty become evident.”

“There is, inherent in poetry, an obligation to turn unsatisfaction into a permanent object. In a first impulse poetry destroys the object which it seizes. By destroying them it returns them to the elusive fluidity of the poet’s existence.”

“The atmosphere of vice, rejection, and hatred correspond to the tension of will which denied the constraint of Good the same way an athlete denies the weight of his dumbbell.”

“Evil, which the poet does not so much perpetuate as he experiences its fascination, is indeed Evil since the will, which can only desire Good, has no part in it.”

On Jules Michete, author of the 1928 book La Sorciere (otherwise known as Satanism and Witchcraft), Bataille writes: “Michelet was guided by the ecstasy of Evil; he was bewildered by it… the abyss of Evil is attractive independently of the profit to be gained by wicked actions.”

“La Sorciere makes its author appear as one of the men who have spoken most humanly about Evil… not of the Evil which we do by abusing strength at the expense of the weak, but of the Evil which goes against our own interests and which is brought about by a passionate desire for liberty.”

“The witch was the victim who died in the horror of flames. It was natural to reverse the values of the theologians… the witch was the incarnation of suffering humanity, persecuted by the strong…”

“… those arts which sustain anguish and the recovery of anguish within us all are the heirs of religion. Out tragedies and our comedies are the continuation of ancient sacrificial rites.”

“The ritual of witchcraft is the ritual of an oppressed people. The religion of a conquered nation has often become the magic of societies formed as a result of conquest.”

“Humanity pursues two goals – one, the negative, is to preserve life (to avoid death), and the other, the positive, is to increase the intensity of life. These two goals are not contradictory, but their intensity is never increased without danger.”

On abyss poet William Blake, Bataille quotes Nietzche (incidentally, Bataille wrote the biography On Nietzche in 1945), “…many others… have descended into the unconscious as far as Blake but they have not returned. The asylums are full of them; for the modern definition of madman is one who has been overwhelmed by the symbols of the unconscious. Blake is the only one who has ventured as far and returned sane.”

Bataille addresses Blake’s transcendence of extremes, a fascination of evil like moth to flame. “Blake’s mind was open to the truth of Evil which exists beyond sensuality and the feeling of horror which is connected with it… In Blake’s stare I sense both resolution and fear. I also feel it is more difficult to penetrate the abyss which man is for himself more deeply than in this representation of Evil:”

Cruelty has a Human Heart
And jealousy a Human Face
Terror the Human Form Divine
And secrecy the Human Dress

The Human Dress is forged Iron
The Human Form a fiery Forge
The Human Face a Furnace seal’d
The Human Heart its hungry Gorge

— "The Divine Image"

Marquis de Sade would be the most “traditionally” Evil author Bataille covers in Literature and Evil – a man who needs no formal introduction, so he goes right to the source: “You want the whole universe to be virtuous and you do not feel that everything would perish in an instant if there were nothing but virtues on Earth,” says Sade. “You do not understand that, since vice must exist, it is as unjust of you to punish it as it would be to poke fun at a blind man… Enjoy yourself, my friend, enjoy yourself and do not pass judgement, leave to nature the care of moving you as she pleases and to eternity that of punishing you.”

Bataille touches on Sade’s ultimate goal of self-negation: “In an endless and relentless torn

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