Bataille advocates for a literature that is experimental, transgressive, and avant-garde – a literature that pushes the boundaries of language, form, and content. This literature, he argues, has the power to disrupt traditional notions of morality and aesthetics, revealing the complexity and depth of human experience.
In “Literature and Evil,” Bataille argues that traditional literature, with its emphasis on moral didacticism and aesthetic formalism, fails to capture the complexity and depth of human existence. Instead, he advocates for a literature that is raw, unflinching, and transgressive – a literature that confronts the reader with the abyss of the unknown, the irrational, and the evil. Georges Bataille - Literature and Evil other ...
“Literature and Evil” is a collection of essays that Bataille wrote between 1946 and 1948. The book is a meditation on the relationship between literature and the concept of evil, which Bataille saw as inextricably linked. For Bataille, literature was not simply a reflection of reality but a means of accessing the deeper, often darker aspects of human experience. Bataille advocates for a literature that is experimental,