Sade and Goya
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+ | *[[User:Jahsonic/Georges Bataille on Sade and Goya ]] | ||
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- "For Sade as for Goya, unreason continues to watch by night; but in this vigil it joins with fresh powers. The non-being it once was now becomes the power to annihilate. Through Sade and Goya, the Western world received the possibility of transcending its reason in violence, and of recovering tragic experience beyond the promises of dialectic.
- After Sade and Goya, and since them, unreason has belonged to whatever is decisive, for the modern world, in any work of art: that is, whatever any work of art contains that is both murderous and constraining."
--Michel Foucault's Madness and Civilization, tr. Richard Howard
See also
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