Foreword |
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ix | |
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In the beginning was death |
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3 | (11) |
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`Turn the world upside down, turn the world, quite ineluctably, upside down' |
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14 | (2) |
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`The thunderbolt pilots all things' |
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16 | (6) |
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22 | (3) |
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25 | (2) |
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27 | (4) |
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`Hard brow and clear eyes' |
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31 | (3) |
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34 | (2) |
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36 | (3) |
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39 | (6) |
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Letters to an unknown woman |
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45 | (6) |
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`When you have to embark on the seas, you emigrants' |
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51 | (4) |
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55 | (2) |
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`Tristi est anima mea usque ad mortem' |
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57 | (10) |
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Torpid Maurras and decrepit Moscow |
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67 | (4) |
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71 | (11) |
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The mortuary chasm of debauchery |
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82 | (3) |
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The philosopher and the rake |
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85 | (3) |
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`I write in order to erase my name' |
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88 | (5) |
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The torture of a Hundred Pieces |
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93 | (3) |
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96 | (4) |
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100 | (7) |
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107 | (5) |
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Don't waste my time with idealism! |
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112 | (4) |
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116 | (10) |
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126 | (5) |
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131 | (4) |
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`Surrealism's secret affectations' |
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135 | (5) |
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The angel and the beast, part 1 |
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140 | (3) |
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143 | (10) |
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`An obscene and horribly desirable trick' |
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153 | (6) |
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`Someone able to see clearly' |
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159 | (8) |
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The Democratic Communist Circle |
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167 | (4) |
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The state: heartbreak and misfortune |
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171 | (5) |
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`A world of appearances and of old men with their teeth falling out' |
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176 | (7) |
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`With a single blow, like an ox in the abattoir' |
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183 | (4) |
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History and its ends; the end of history |
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187 | (4) |
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The animal-headed journal: Minotaure |
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191 | (5) |
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196 | (9) |
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Thunderbolts and forebodings |
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205 | (4) |
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The sky turned upside down |
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209 | (9) |
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`Revolutionary offensive or death' |
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218 | (10) |
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The angel and the beast, part 2 |
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228 | (3) |
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From Contre-Attaque to Acephale: Andre Masson |
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231 | (4) |
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`Everything calls for the death which ravages us' |
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235 | (19) |
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254 | (7) |
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261 | (10) |
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Vivan le femmine, viva il buon vino, sostegno e gloria d'umanita |
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271 | (10) |
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281 | (2) |
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283 | (6) |
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`I love ignorance touching on the future' |
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289 | (8) |
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The excretions of the war: exodus, evacuation |
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297 | (3) |
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300 | (5) |
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Edwarda: the divine tatters |
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305 | (4) |
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`I call myself the abomination of God' |
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309 | (2) |
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311 | (5) |
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From the community of the impossible to the impossible community |
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316 | (2) |
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The annunciation made to Marie |
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318 | (4) |
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Sickening poetic sentimentality |
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322 | (7) |
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Philosophy's `easy virtue' |
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329 | (8) |
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`System is needed and so is excess' |
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337 | (7) |
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Philosophy in the old folk's home |
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344 | (8) |
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352 | (5) |
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A potential for stench and irremediable fury |
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357 | (6) |
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363 | (5) |
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368 | (8) |
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376 | (4) |
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380 | (7) |
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387 | (8) |
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From Vezelay to Carpentras |
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395 | (8) |
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403 | (4) |
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The angel and the beast, part 3 |
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407 | (8) |
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415 | (5) |
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420 | (5) |
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A hypermorality: for the love of anguish alone |
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425 | (2) |
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427 | (10) |
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437 | (4) |
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The catechism of `saints' |
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441 | (5) |
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446 | (4) |
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450 | (4) |
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What lies behind misfortune |
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454 | (4) |
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458 | (4) |
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462 | (3) |
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The bit between the teeth |
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465 | (9) |
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To die of laughing and to laugh of dying |
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474 | (5) |
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To think everything to a point that makes people tremble |
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479 | (3) |
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`God: a Feydeau-style situation comedy' |
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482 | (5) |
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`One day this living world will pullulate in my dead mouth' |
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487 | (3) |
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And finally, incompletion |
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490 | (3) |
Afterword |
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493 | (2) |
Notes |
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495 | (86) |
Bibliography |
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581 | (4) |
Index |
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585 | |