The Solar Anus Explained

The Solar Anus
Author:Georges Bataille
Title Orig:L'anus solaire
Illustrator:André Masson
Language:French
Publisher:Éditions de la Galerie Simon
Pub Date:1931
Oclc:8937274

The Solar Anus (French: L'anus solaire) is a short surrealist text by the French writer Georges Bataille, written in 1927 and published with drawings by André Masson in 1931.[1]

Albeit elliptically, its aphorisms refer to decay, death, vegetation, natural disasters, impotence, frustration, ennui and excrement. It makes ironic reference to the sun, which, although it brings life to the Earth, can also result in death from its unrestrained energies. Moreover, the anus may be seen as a symbol of the inevitability of residual waste due to its role in excretion.[2] [3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Jay, Martin. Downcast Eyes: The Denigration of Vision in Twentieth-century French Thought. 1993. University of California Press. 0520088859 . 223.
  2. Book: Stevens, Christa. L'écriture solaire d'Hélène Cixous: Travail du texte et histoires du sujet dans Portrait du soleil. 1999. Rodopi. Amsterdam [u.a.]. 978-90-420-0744-4. 81–83. https://books.google.com/books?id=9NtZ-OLXHuQC&q=L'anus%20solaire&pg=PA81. L'histoire solaire du sujet. French.
  3. Book: Hegarty, Paul. Georges Bataille: Core cultural theorist. 2000. Sage Publications Ltd. London. 978-0-7619-6078-2. 67–68.