Louis XXX presents two little known hybrid texts by French novelist and philosopher Georges Bataille: The Little One and The Tomb of Louis XXX. Written alongside Bataille's major work, Guilty, and only loosely narrative in any conventional sense, these audaciously experimental pieces of pornographic chamber music commingle prose and poetry, fiction and autobiography, philosophical and theological meditations, abstract artifice and intimate confession, bound together by the mysterious pseudonym at their center. Jean-Jacques Pauvert claimed that The Little One was the most shattering text that Bataille ever wrote and André Breton remarked that The Little One offers the most hungering, most moving aspect of [Bataille's] thought and attests to the importance that that thought will have in the near future. The future is now as these texts appear in English for the first time. An extended postface by the translator places the works in biographical, historical, and critical perspective as assemblages constellated around the disappearance of the discursive real.Best Foreign-Language Reprint 2013, Chicago Center for Literature & PhotographyHere is the crux of Bataille: the admixture of pain and pleasure, torture and eroticism. Robert Kiely, Review 31An obscure work in the history of transgressive literature has, for the first time, been given definitive and due recognition. Matt Pincus, Pank MagazineIn both of these fragmentary, hallucinatory, and sexually explicit works, we can see Bataille's influence in authors like Kathy Acker and William S. Burroughs. Karl Wollf, The Driftless Area ReviewStuart Kendall is a writer, editor, and translator working at the intersections of poetics, modern and contemporary visual culture, theology, ecology, and design. His books include Georges Bataille (Reaktion Books, Critical Lives, 2007), The Ends of Art and Design (Infrathin, 2011), and eight book-length translations of French poetry, philosophy, and visual and cultural criticism, including books by Bataille, Maurice Blanchot, Paul Éluard, Jean Baudrillard, Guy Debord, and René Char. In 2012, Contra Mundum published his Gilgamesh, a new version of the eponymous Mesopotamian poems.
Click on any of the links above to see more books like this one.