In
today's selection -- our word "sadism," the derivation of pleasure
as a result of inflicting pain, cruelty, degradation, or humiliation, comes
from the Marquis de Sade (1740 - 1814). Born into French royalty, he was
subjected to abuse from an early age, and grew into a young adult of
monstrous sexual appetites and behaviors that kept him in trouble with his
family and the law. Denied sexual prey with his imprisonment at age twenty
eight, he turned to writing and played out his fantasies on the page. He
spent thirty two years of his life either in prison or an asylum:
"Upon
his return to France [a wanted man, having escaped captivity], [the Marquis
de] Sade hid in plain sight at his Lacoste estate. The marquis kept a
relatively low profile, which for him meant months-long orgies -- often
involving underage girls and boys, hired as maids and cooks. One girl ended
up pregnant; another died following a short illness. At one point, an angry
father showed up to liberate his daughter and fired a pistol point-blank at
Sade's chest. The gun misfired, and the marquis lived to sodomize another
day. 'I pass for the werewolf of these parts!' he wrote with delight in a
letter. 'Poor little chicks!'
"In 1777, his mother-in-law
lured him into Paris under the pretense that his mother was on her deathbed.
(She had, in fact, already passed away.) [She] alerted authorities that Sade
was back within city limits, and they arrested him on the outstanding charges
of poisoning and sodomy. [She] again argued with her daughter that what she
was doing was in Sade's best interests: it was the only way Sade could appeal
his previous conviction and clear his name, thus restoring respectability to
their family. ... [In the end the final] verdict was ... life in prison.
The term would begin immediately.
"With the years stretching
out infinitely before him, Sade picked up a pen. If he could not act out his
fantasies any longer, he would write them down. ... The marquis wrote many
novels during his imprisonment, including Justine, or Good
Conduct Well Chastised; The 120 Days of Sodom; and Philosophy
in the Bedroom. While he may have written fiction before this date, he
never made any mention of it. Authorship was considered an ignoble profession
for a gentleman of the Marquis de Sade's standing (ironic, considering his
other passions). It was only when he was stripped of his nobility and freedom
that he became the man of letters we know him as today. Sade 'went into
prison a man; he came out a writer,' French philosopher Simone de Beauvoir
wrote. ...
"Improbably,
a political sea change in France led to the release of prisoners held under
royal decrees. On Good Friday in 1790 ... Sade was set free ... [at] a
time when erotic works were in great demand, and many of his books went
through multiple editions ...
"As
could be expected based on his past behavior, no subject was off limits in
Sade's work: sexual violence, suffering, torture, rape, sodomy, incest,
pedophilia, necrophilia, bestiality, and cannibalism were among the topics he
explored. Sade's wish for The 120 Days of Sodom, for example, was to
pen 'the most impure tale that has ever been written since the world exists.'
...
"Although
his books sold well, Sade was not a critical darling. Petites-Affiches,
in 1791, advised young people to avoid Justine. 'Mature men, read it
to see how far one can go in derangement of the human imagination,' the
journal wrote. 'But throw it into the fire immediately thereafter.' ...
"In 1799, Napoleon
Bonaparte assumed leadership of France. He was determined to clean up the
country, starting with the plague of immorality that besieged it. In 1801,
government officials ordered the arrest of the author of the 'pornographic'
novel Juliette. Sade, who was at his publisher's office making
corrections to the manuscript when the police arrived, was easily identified
as the author. ...
"In 1814, the marquis died
in prison of natural causes. His family burned all of his unpublished
manuscripts. If they wished to prevent the Marquis de Sade from further
tarnishing the family name, they were unsuccessful: the word sadisme,
meaning 'to derive pleasure, especially sexual gratification, from inflicting
pain, suffering, and humiliation on others,' entered the French language, and
later begat the English word 'sadism' and its many derivatives. As Sade once
wrote to his son, 'Do not be sorry to see your name live on in immortality.
My works are bringing it about, and your virtues, though preferable to my
works, would never do that.' "
Author: Andrew Shaffer
Title: Literary Rogues
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Date: Copyright 2013 by Andrew
Shaffer
Pages:
9-14
Literary Rogues: A Scandalous History of Wayward Authors
by Andrew Shaffer by Harper
Perennial
Paperback ~ Release Date: 2013-02-05
|
Former leading New Zealand publisher and bookseller, and widely experienced judge of both the Commonwealth Writers Prize and the Montana New Zealand Book Awards, talks about what he is currently reading, what impresses him and what doesn't, along with chat about the international English language book scene, and links to sites of interest to booklovers.
Saturday, April 27, 2013
the original sadist turns to writing
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