Without End: Sade's Critique of Reason

Without End: Sade's Critique of Reason

by William S. Allen
Without End: Sade's Critique of Reason

Without End: Sade's Critique of Reason

by William S. Allen

Paperback(Reprint)

$46.95 
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Overview

The reputation of the Marquis de Sade is well-founded. The experience of reading his works is demanding to an extreme. Violence and sexuality appear on almost every page, and these descriptions are interspersed with extended discourses on materialism, atheism, and crime. In this bold and rigorous study William S. Allen sets out the context and implications of Sade's writings in order to explain their lasting challenge to thought. For what is apparent from a close examination of his works is the breadth of his readings in contemporary science and philosophy, and so the question that has to be addressed is why Sade pursued these interests by way of erotica of the most violent kind.

Allen shows that Sade's interests lead to a form of writing that seeks to bring about a new mode of experience that is engaged in exploring the limits of sensibility through their material actualization. In common with other Enlightenment thinkers Sade is concerned with the place of reason in the world, a place that becomes utterly transformed by a materialism of endless excess. This concern underlies his interest in crime and sexuality, and thereby puts him in the closest proximity to thinkers like Kant and Diderot, but also at the furthest extreme, in that it indicates how far the nature and status of reason is perverted. It is precisely this materialist critique of reason that is developed and demonstrated in his works, and which their reading makes persistently, excessively, apparent.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501354625
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 06/27/2019
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.47(d)

About the Author

William S. Allen is an independent researcher and a librarian at the University of Southampton, UK. He is the author of Ellipsis: Of Poetry and the Experience of Language after Heidegger, Hölderlin, and Blanchot (2007) and Aesthetics of Negativity: Blanchot, Adorno, and Autonomy (2016).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Abbreviations

Introduction: Realism, Imagination, and Desire
1. Turmoil: Adorno's Literal Reading
2. Intoxication: The Nature of Influence
3. Hors-la-loi: Blanchot and the Revolution
4. Disorientation: The Conditions of Abstraction
5. Praxis: Crime and History
6. Resistance: Forms Without End

Notes
Further Reading
Index

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