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Georges Bataille: Oeuvres complètes, t. 1-12 (Gallimard, Paris, 1970-1988) A superbly archived and collated complete works that fortunately was undertaken while the more obscure material was readily to hand. Now we need good critical editions of some of the major works to track and document Bataille’s numerous literary, political and philosophical references.
Not the least intriguing element of volume 1 is the
multiplicity of writing styles, that jostle with such mutually exclusive bluntness as to come across more as multiple personae than different styles. The academic Bataille of Aréthuse is vastly different from the surrealist as well as from the polemicist of Contre-attaque. The most unique, if not necessarily the most personal of
Bataille's voices appears (of course) in L'Histoire de l'oeil (which itself contains at least two narrative personae), but also in the several essays where Bataille begins to work with concepts from Hegel and Heidegger
and merge them with the sort of aggressive sexuality unique to himself. Plus: don't miss the obscure manuscript on Notre-Dame de Rheims where
the young Bataille extols the glory of World War I France.