"Politics, Writing, Mutilation " was first published in 1985.
Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make
long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published
unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press
editions.
Five twentieth-century French writers played, and continue to
play, a pivotal role in the development of literary-philosophical
thinking that has come to be known in the United States as
post-structuralism. The work of Georges Bataille, Maurice Blanchot,
Raymond Roussel, Michel Leiris, and Francis Ponge in the 1930s and
1940s amounts to a prehistory of today's theoretical debates; the
writings of Foucault and Derrida in particular would have been
unthinkable outside the context provided by these writers. In
"Politics, Writing, Mutilation," Allan Stoekl emphasizes their role
as precursors, but he also makes clear that they created a
distinctive body of work that must be read and evaluated on its own
terms.
Stoekl's critical readings of their work--selected novels,
poems, and autobiographical fragments--reveal them to be
battlegrounds not only of disruptive language practices, but of
conflicting political drives as well. These irreconcilable
tendencies can be defined as progressive political revolution, on
the one hand with its emphasis on utility, conservation, and labor;
and, on the other hand, a notion of dangerous and sinister
production that stresses orgiastic sexuality and delirious
expenditure. Caught between these forces is the intellectual of
Bataille's time (and indeed of ours), locked in impotence,
self-betrayal, and automutilation.
Stoekl develops his critique through dual readings of each
writer's central work--the first reading deconstructive, the second
a search for the political meaning excluded by a deconstructive
approach. Repeating this process on a larger scale, he shows how
Derrida and Foucault are indebted to their precursors even while
they have betrayed them by stripping their work of political
conflict and historical specificity. And he acknowledges that one
of the most painful questions faced in prewar and Occupied
France--that of the unthinkable guilt and duplicity of the
intellectual--may not be as remote from contemporary theoretical
concerns as some would have us believe.
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