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Pierre Klossowski (1905–2001)

Autor(a) de The Baphomet

48+ Works 998 Membros 5 Críticas 5 Favorited

About the Author

Pierre Klossowski, writer and philosopher, was born in Paris on August 5, 1905. His writings span a wide range of topics, from Doctors of the Church to the Marquis de Sade. His last novel, The Baphomet, received the Prix des Critique in France (1965). (Bowker Author Biography)

Obras por Pierre Klossowski

The Baphomet (1965) 188 exemplares
Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle (1969) 157 exemplares
Sade My Neighbor (1991) 133 exemplares
Roberte Ce Soir / The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes (1954) — Artista da capa, algumas edições94 exemplares
Living Currency (1970) 43 exemplares
Diana at Her Bath (1980) 42 exemplares
Such a Deathly Desire (1963) 38 exemplares
Les Lois de l'hospitalité (1965) 37 exemplares
Roberte ce soir (1959) 29 exemplares
Pierre Klossowski (1990) 25 exemplares
La vocazione interrotta (1990) 13 exemplares
The Suspended Vocation (2020) 8 exemplares
La ressemblance (1986) 3 exemplares
Roberte au Cinéma (1978) — Autor — 3 exemplares
Sobre Proust (2021) 3 exemplares
L'Adolescent immortel (1994) 2 exemplares
A Moeda Viva (2008) 1 exemplar
L'eterno ritorno dell'estetica. Da e oltre Nietzsche (2012) — Contribuidor — 1 exemplar
Tan funesto deseo (2004) 1 exemplar
Sade, mój bliźni 1 exemplar
Pierre Klossowski, Simulacra (1981) 1 exemplar
Kloster Michaelstein (2004) 1 exemplar
Pierre Klossowski (1996) 1 exemplar

Associated Works

The 120 Days of Sodom and Other Writings (1785) — Introdução, algumas edições1,207 exemplares
Rainer Maria Rilke and Lou Andreas-Salome: The Correspondence (1985) — Prefácio, algumas edições124 exemplares
The College of Sociology, 1937-39 (1982) — Contribuidor — 66 exemplares
Journal (1959) — Tradutor, algumas edições14 exemplares
新版 バタイユの世界 — Contribuidor — 1 exemplar

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Membros

Críticas

«Divertimento» dialogué, Roberte et Gulliver met en scène le personnage de Roberte, en la livrant, sous le regard des Collégiens, aux entreprises de Gulliver. La Lettre à Michel Butor qui suit va plus loin qu’une simple discussion sur le livre et l’écriture. Par sa réflexion sur le «simulacre» elle nous fait comprendre le lien mystérieux qui unit, chez Klossowski, l’écriture et le dessin.
 
Assinalado
petervanbeveren | May 11, 2023 |
Artist, philosopher, novelist and translator, Pierre Klossowski created an intense world of violence, passion, moral turbulence and theological inquest. Encouraged by Robert Lebel, Andre Masson and Alberto Giacometti, Klossowski produced a number of drawings to illustrate his first novel, Roberte ce soir, in 1953 and held his first public exhibition in Paris in 1967." "This comprehensive monograph explores the life-size drawings of mythological, fictional and historical figures at the heart of his work: Diana and Actaeon, Tarquin and Lucretia and Klossowski's own invention Roberte are supported by a large cast, as diverse as Alexandre Dumas' femme fatale Milady, the fifteenth-century serial killer Gilles de Rais and Jonathan Swift's Gulliver.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
petervanbeveren | Feb 13, 2023 |
 
Assinalado
JayLivernois | Apr 4, 2013 |
Pierre Klossowski's magisterial reading brings into relief the seductive character of the ordeals involved with Nietzsche's sicknesses and anti-sociality. Although Nietzsche felt compelled to communicate the circulus vitiosus Deus and thus to clothe it in concepts, it is not chiefly a doctrine. Like the "Kingdom of God" of Jesus, or the "Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel" of the Master Therion, the Eternal Return is in fact an experience that overcomes rational identity even as it validates the numinous self. The incoherence of this experience is of a piece with the absurdity of its prophet and his apparent descent into buffoonery and madness.

In discussing such matters as "valetudinary states" (i.e. experiences of illness), the Eternal Return, and the semiotics of the ineffable corporeal impulse, Klossowski makes extensive use of Nietzsche's private correspondence and manuscript fragments. As he demonstrates, Nietzsche viewed the Eternal Return as a secret knowledge that--in virtue of its very nature--could not be communicated openly, and so these texts from outside of the canonical Nietzsche corpus are indispensable. In the original French edition, these were presented without proper citations, and it was a heroic work of translators Ronald Vouillé and Donald W. Smith (into German and English respectively) to have produced the apparatus which properly identifies their sources in the Sämtliche Werke: Kritische Studienaufgabe and other posthumous editions.

Klossowski, who did not call himself a philosopher, often seems concerned to rescue Nietzsche from his 20th-century rehabilitation in the philosophical discipline. Although Klossowski was a student of Georges Bataille and dedicated Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle to Gilles Deleuze, the text is free of explicit references to or arguments with other Nietzsche scholars. At the same time, it deserves to be read in agonistic contact with the interpretations provided by Martin Heidegger, Walter Kaufmann, and others. This book has evidently had a significant influence on later French theorists such as Michel Foucault, Jean-François Lyotard, and Jean Baudrillard.

One unusual merit of Klossowski's study is the extent to which he takes seriously Nietzsche's oracular function. More than once, Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle pauses to consider the extent to which the world of the middle 20th century had met, and in some cases surpassed, the social and cultural prognostications offered by Nietzsche, who believed that the product of his contemplation might "break the history of humanity in two." (100, 230) In exercising his "religious, that is to say god-forming, instinct," Nietzsche contemplated "God as a maximal state, as an epoch." (209, 107) The perfection of the individual relative to this epoch is to operate unassuaged of purpose. "Nietzsche's unavowable project is to act without intention: the impossible morality." (140)

As blurber Graham Parkes remarks, Klossowski's book is "profound, but extremely taxing." To profit from it requires prior familiarity with Nietzsche's biography and writings. It will not serve as an introduction to Nietzsche's work, but it remains one of the most penetrating examinations of the anti-system which that work adumbrates.
… (mais)
3 vote
Assinalado
paradoxosalpha | Dec 17, 2010 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
48
Also by
5
Membros
998
Popularidade
#25,829
Avaliação
½ 3.6
Críticas
5
ISBN
124
Línguas
12
Marcado como favorito
5

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