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Bataille, Georges 1897–1962: Critical Essay by Jean-paul Sartre

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About 13 pages (3,934 words)
Georges Bataille Summary

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Mr. Bataille has survived God's death and is here in order to bear witness to his failure. "God is silent … everything inside me asks for God."

Modern thought has found two types of absurdity. For some, the fundamental absurdity is "factitiousness," i.e. the irreducible contingency of our "being here," of our purposeless, no-reason existence. For others it is caused by man's being an insoluble contradiction. It is this latter absurdity that Mr. Bataille feels the most vividly. He has read Hegel and agrees that reality is conflict. But for him—as for Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Jaspers—there are no-solution conflicts: he has eliminated the moment of synthesis from Hegel's trinity and substituted a tragic vision of the world for the dialectical vision. For Mr. Bataille absurdity is not given, but made: man makes himself a conflict.

This is a free excerpt of 134 words. There are 3,934 words (approx. 13 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Bataille, Georges 1897–1962: Critical Essay by Jean-paul Sartre from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

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