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Underworld
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Georges Bataille
“But the reduction of "that which is" to the order of things is
not limited to slavery. Slavery is abolished, but we ourselves are
aware of the aspects of social life in which man is ):~legated to
the level of things, and we should know that this relegation did
not await slavery. From the start, the introduction of labor into
the world replaced intimacy, the depth of desire and its free outbreaks, with rational progression, where what matters is no longer the truth of the present moment, but, rather, the subsequent
results of operations. The first labor established the world ofthings,
to which the profane world of the Ancients generally corresponds.
Once the world of things was posited, man himself became one
of the things of this world, at least for the time in which he
labored. It is this degradation that man has always tried to escape.
In his strange myths, in his cruel rites, man is in search of a lost
intimacy from the first.”
Georges Bataille, The Accursed Share: An Essay on General Economy, Volume I: Consumption

Georges Bataille
“That sand into which we bury ourselves in order not to see, is formed of words…and it is true that words, their labyrinths, the exhausting immensity of their “possibles”, in short their treachery, have something of quicksand about them.”
Georges Bataille

Georges Bataille
“Human life is exhausted from serving as the head of, or the reason for, the universe. To the extent that it becomes this head and this reason, to the extent that it becomes necessary to the universe, it accepts servitude. If it is not free, existence becomes empty or neutral, and if it is free, it is in play. The Earth, as long as it only gave rise to cataclysms, trees, and birds, was a free universe; the fascination of freedom was tarnished when the Earth produced a being who demanded necessity as law above the universe. Man however has remained free not to respond to any necessity; he is free to resemble everything that is not himself in the universe. He can set aside the thought that it is he or God who keeps the rest of things from being absurd.”
Georges Bataille, Visions of Excess: Selected Writings, 1927–1939

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