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The Mystery of Eroticism: Taboo and Transgression 

    page views:1  Publication date:2019-08-24  
Bataille: Without transgression, taboo loses its meaning.
Bataille's writing of *Eroticism* fully reflects his thought system and key concepts: the violence behind eroticism—an irrational, natural, and disordered world. And violence stems from the extravagant consumption of life's "excess." From a dynamic and vitalist perspective, Bataille explains various contradictions in human existence: such as taboo and transgression, reproduction and death, murder and sacrifice, the sacred and the sacrilegious… All of this is, in fact, the source of his inspiration for discussing the mechanisms of eroticism, and the methodological "foundation" for his interpretation. In other words, Bataille also uses eroticism to construct the unity of these seemingly contradictory propositions; this is his underlying dialectic. Sade
grasped the truth of eroticism: "Only through violence can one ultimately respond to the supreme image of man." In his novels, the protagonist's infinite negation of others is an example: others cannot be companions, but only victims. "In the face of the human image presented by Sade, the other is no longer valued." This world, artificially created through infinitely exaggerated assumptions: "Nature allows us to be born alone; there can be no connection between one person and another. The only rule of behavior is that I like everything that makes me happy, and I don't care if it hurts others. No matter how deep the suffering of others, it is not as important as my happiness."
This concept of severing the connection between oneself and others to such an extreme is unimaginable and impossible. However, it is precisely in this bizarre paradox that Bataille discovered Sade's secret. "According to Sade's principle of negation of the other, seeing the ultimate negation of the other as the negation of the self." In fact, Sade, in order to realize the value of the "supreme one," did not care about personal pleasure at all; he only valued the violence of transgression, "the transcendence of personal existence must be linked with sin, with transgression."
Sade built sexual pleasure on the disorder caused by sin, placing it in a world of consumption and destruction. It subverted the world that originally took resource growth as its essence; "the truth of eroticism is betrayal." From Sade's creed, Bataille extracted the "idea" of eroticism. It can be said that he understood Sade's eroticism in order to reach the wholeness of humanity. This "wholeness of humanity" is presented in what he called "inner experience."
Without transgression, taboo loses its meaning
. How to understand this "coherence"? Bataille once linked poetry and erotic forms, believing that both lead people to the same state, which is the experience of coherence—"leading to a place where the distinctions between separate things disappear, and things are mixed and merged. Poetry leads us to eternity, to death, and through death, to achieve coherence: poetry is eternity. It is the ocean, merging into the sun." This concept presupposes that the existence of life is always self-enclosed. Each individual existence is distinct from one another, without direct connection, "there is an abyss between one individual existence and another, a discontinuity." The abyss is similar to hell, and you can sense the existentialist implications behind this concept.
People's desire to reject self-enclosure and the erotic realm happen to reach a certain consensus. In other words, eroticism is the intermediate term between life and death; it is "the approval of life until death," unifying life and death together. Bataille confronts our disjointed individual existence, and the allure of death is essentially the cancellation of this disjointed isolation. Simultaneously, both asexual and sexual reproduction contain a moment of continuity. The former occurs in the instant of the splitting of two life forms within the death of the first. The latter occurs in the fusion of sperm and egg, achieving a transition to continuity. However, is this moment of continuity unconditional? Of course not; it requires the transgression of violence, crossing boundaries that are precisely taboo.
Pornography is a typical example of this violent transgression. Bataille uses three forms—physical pornography, emotional pornography, and sacred pornography—to categorize these levels. They all boil down to one point: "replacing the isolation of existence with a deep sense of continuity, replacing the disjointedness of existence." The transition from the normal state to the erotic state signifies the introduction of violence into our lives; the disjointed, closed existence of the individual is broken, dissolved, and destroyed. Stripping naked is the symbolic moment, signifying "openness" in contrast to closure. "Obscenery" symbolizes the chaos and disorder brought about by violence. The originally absolutely individual physical body is invaded in pornography, disappears in fusion, and loses its self.
Bataille's division of pornography depends on his dichotomy of the world: the secular world (physical and emotional pornography) and the sacred world (sacred pornography). Taboos in the secular world are often systematically transgressed and broken in the sacred world. For example, the taboo against killing is transgressed by sacred acts of sacrifice (human sacrifice); in systematic and organized forms of violence, war is precisely the transgression of the taboo of "legalization" of killing—the taboo against killing becomes invalid in war. This forms a uniquely meaningful dialectical unity: taboos naturally need to be transgressed and broken, not "cancelled." Without transgression, taboos have no need to exist and lose their meaning.
Bataille connects pornography with sacrifice because death is real destruction, while pornography uses simulated experiences to "replace" it. "In pornography, the female partner is portrayed as the sacrifice, and the male as the priest." The logic of pornography is also built upon the enjoyment of sensitivity, shame, and pleasure arising from transgressing taboos. "If the elements constituting destructive aggression, or even violence, are absent, then pornography is even less likely to achieve sexual satisfaction." Pornography is inherently linked to the "experience of original sin." It "leads people towards accomplished transgression, successful transgression, experiencing while simultaneously maintaining the taboo, maintaining the taboo in order to enjoy the pleasure of the taboo. The intrinsic experience of pornography requires the experiencer to have sensitivity to anxiety, because anxiety is the basis of taboo, and this sensitivity must be stronger than the desire that guides them to violate the taboo." From a certain perspective, Bataille integrates the views of Marx and Freud
into the spectrum of knowledge research
, combining "labor" and "production," "energy" and "expenditure." The former establishes a rational world centered on labor, a symbol of order. The latter suggests an irrational world represented by animal instincts, marked by chaos, violence, and disorder—that "nature." Pornography, however, subtly implies the fusion and transformation of these two worlds. Sexual abundance represents a world of constant production and growth, yet this production merely serves to consume excess life, leading to death.
In my view, the profound significance of *Eroticism* lies in a kind of "reset" and "integration." Bataille transformed the long-standing exclusion and obscuration of eroticism, reintegrating it into a knowledge framework. His research method also blends scientific description with inner experience. This framework breaks down isolated, objectified research, emphasizing relational expression; a "total eroticism" merges different perspectives such as biology, anthropology, history, archaeology, philosophy, religion, literature, and art.

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