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Eroticizing Aesthetics


Eroticizing Aesthetics

In the Real with Bataille and Lacan
Global Aesthetic Research

von: Tim Themi

44,99 €

Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 03.06.2021
ISBN/EAN: 9781538147832
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 230

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Beschreibungen

<span><span>Bringing together Bataille with Lacan and Nietzsche, Tim Themi examines the role of aesthetics implicit in each and how this invokes an erotic process celebrating the real of what is usually excluded from articulation. Bataille came to deem eroticism as the standpoint from which to grasp humanity as a whole, based on his understanding of our transition to humanity being founded on a series of taboos placed on inner animality. An erotic outlet for the latter was historically the aesthetic dimensions of our religions, but Bataille’s view of how this was gradually diminished has much in keeping with Nietzsche’s critique of Christian-Platonic dualism and Lacan’s of the desexualised Good of Western metaphysics. Building from these often surprising proximities, Themi closely examines Bataille’s many interventions into the history of aesthetics — from his confrontations with Breton’s surrealism to his own novels and encounter with the animal cave paintings of Lascaux — radically re-illuminating the corollary phenomena of Dionysos in Nietzsche’s philosophy and the “jouissance [enjoyment] of transgression” in the psychoanalysis of Lacan. A new ethical criterion for aesthetic works and creations on this basis becomes possible.</span></span>
<p><span>Bringing together Bataille with Lacan and Nietzsche, Tim Themi examines the role of aesthetics, implicit in each, and how this invokes an erotic process celebrating the real of what is usually excluded from articulation.</span></p>
<span><span>Acknowledgments</span></span>
<br>
<span><span>Abbreviations</span></span>
<br>
<span><span>INTRODUCTION </span></span>
<br>
<span></span>
<br>
<span><span>1</span><a><span>BATAILLE, NIETZSCHE, LACAN, AND THE </span><span>REAL</span><span> OF EROTICS</span></a></span>
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<span><span>1.1</span><a><span>Palaeolithic </span></a><span>Transition from Animal to Human </span></span>
<br>
<span><span>1.2 Death of Tragedy from Socrates’ Incompetence</span></span>
<br>
<span><span>1.3Taboo </span><span>on</span><span> Transgression from Yahweh’s Ignorance</span></span>
<br>
<span><span>1.4Capitalism’s Curious </span><a><span>Service of </span></a><span>Goods</span></span>
<br>
<span></span>
<br>
<span><span>2 METAPHORISING THE SPLIT GAZE OF BATAILLE’S STORY OF </span><span>EYE</span></span>
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<span><span>2.1 Surface Formalism: Metonymic Crosscuts of Metaphoric Chains</span></span>
<br>
<span><span>2.2 Depth Contents: The Violence of the Eye’s Transgression</span></span>
<br>
<span><span>2.3 Sade’s Sovereign Man: The Rape of Priest’s Eye by the Gaze</span></span>
<br>
<span><span> </span></span>
<br>
<span><span>3 BATAILLE, NIETZSCHE, LACAN AND THE </span><span>REAL</span><span> OF AESTHETICS</span></span>
<br>
<span><span>3.1 Dissident Surrealism: Bataille’s </span><span>Documents</span><span> Critique of Aesthetics</span></span>
<br>
<span><span>3.2 Lascaux Caves: Divine Animality as the Originary </span><span>Real</span><span> of Aesthetics</span></span>
<br>
<span><span>3.3 The </span><span>Accursed</span><span> Sovereignty of Art, and Nietzsche</span></span>
<br>
<span></span>
<br>
<span><span>4 </span><a><span>NIETZSCHE’S AFFIRMING PSYCHOANALYSIS IN FREUD, SURREALIST MODERNSIM, BATAILLE, AND LACAN</span></a></span>
<br>
<span><span>4.1 Germanophone Context: Nietzsche and Freud</span><span> </span></span>
<br>
<span><span>4.2 Francophone Context: Bataille, Surrealism, Modernism, Lacan</span></span>
<br>
<span><span>4.3 Dionysian Context: Presence of Myth in Absence</span></span>
<br>
<span></span>
<br>
<span><span>5 </span><a><span>FROM DIONYSOS TO DEVIL: BATAILLE’S EVIL HAPPINESS OF LITERATURE</span></a></span>
<br>
<span><span>5.1 Literature’s Quest for Happiness of the Erotic</span><span> </span></span>
<br>
<span><span>5.2 Literature as Condescension of Desire to Evil</span></span>
<br>
<span><span>5.3 Poetry’s Force of Sovereignty from the Rut of Literature</span></span>
<br>
<span><span>5.4Art and Politics: Separate Connection of the Imaginary and Symbolic in the Real</span></span>
<br>
<span></span>
<br>
<span><span>6 ETERNAL RETURNS: EROTIC POLITICS IN BATAILLE’S </span><span>BLUE OF NOON</span></span>
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<span><span>6.1 Superficial Socialism</span><span>—</span><span>The Case of Lazare </span></span>
<br>
<span><span>6.2 Superficial Surrealism—The Case of Xenie</span></span>
<br>
<span><span>6.3 Libidinal Demand for Death—The Return of Dirty </span><span>Doro-thea</span></span>
<br>
<span><span>6.4Split-Subjects of Political Economy—Left, Right, Left . . .</span></span>
<br>
<span></span>
<br>
<span><span>CONCLUSION </span></span>
<br>
<span><span></span><span>Bibliography </span><span></span></span>
<br>
<span><span>Index</span></span>
<br>
<span></span>
<br>
<span></span>
<p><span>Tim Themi teaches in the School of Culture and Communication at The University of Melbourne and is the author of </span><span>Lacan’s Ethics and Nietzsche’s Critique of Platonism</span><span>.</span></p>

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