Founder of several journals and literary groups, Bataille is the author of a large and diverse body of work: readings, poems, essays on innumerable subjects (on the
mysticism of economy,
poetry, philosophy,
the arts and eroticism). He sometimes published under pseudonyms, and some of his publications were banned. He was relatively ignored during his lifetime and scorned by contemporaries such as
Jean-Paul Sartre as an advocate of
mysticism, but after his death had considerable influence on authors such as
Michel Foucault,
Philippe Sollers, and
Jacques Derrida, all of whom were affiliated with the journal . His influence is felt most explicitly in the phenomenological work of
Jean-Luc Nancy, but is also significant for the work of
Jean Baudrillard, the
psychoanalytic theories of
Jacques Lacan,
Julia Kristeva, and recent anthropological work from the likes of
Michael Taussig. Initially attracted to
Surrealism, Bataille quickly fell out with its founder
André Breton, although Bataille and the Surrealists resumed cautiously cordial relations after
World War II. Bataille was a member of the extremely influential
College of Sociology which included several other renegade surrealists. He was heavily influenced by
Hegel,
Freud,
Marx,
Marcel Mauss, the
Marquis de Sade,
Alexandre Kojève, and
Friedrich Nietzsche, the last of whom he defended in a notable essay against appropriation by the
Nazis. Fascinated by
human sacrifice, he founded a secret society, , the symbol of which was a headless man. According to legend, Bataille and the other members of each agreed to be the sacrificial victim as an inauguration; none of them would agree to be the executioner. An indemnity was offered for an executioner, but none was found before the dissolution of shortly before the war. The group also published an eponymous review of Nietzsche's philosophy which attempted to postulate what Derrida has called an "anti-
sovereignty". Collaborators in these projects included
André Masson,
Pierre Klossowski,
Roger Caillois,
Jules Monnerot, Jean Rollin and
Jean Wahl. The German philosopher and cultural critic,
Walter Benjamin, described Bataille and s fascination with sacrifice as a "pre-fascist aestheticism". Bataille drew from diverse influences and used various modes of discourse to create his work. His novel
Story of the Eye (), published under the pseudonym Lord Auch (literally, Lord "to the shithouse" — "auch" being short for "aux chiottes", slang for telling somebody off by sending him to the toilet), was initially read as pure
pornography, while interpretation of the work has gradually matured to reveal the same considerable philosophical and emotional depth that is characteristic of other writers who have been categorized within "
literature of transgression". The imagery of the novel is built upon a series of metaphors which in turn refer to philosophical constructs developed in his work: the eye, the egg, the Sun, the Earth, the testicle. Other famous novels include the
posthumously published My Mother (which would become the basis of
Christophe Honoré's film ),
The Impossible and
Blue of Noon, which, with its
incest,
necrophilia, politics, and autobiographical undertones, is a much darker treatment of contemporary historical reality. During World War II Bataille produced
Summa Atheologica (the title parallels
Thomas Aquinas'
Summa Theologica) which comprises his works
Inner Experience,
Guilty, and
On Nietzsche. After the war he composed
The Accursed Share, which he said represented thirty years' work. The singular conception of "
sovereignty" expounded there would become an important topic of discussion for Derrida,
Giorgio Agamben,
Jean-Luc Nancy and others. Bataille also founded the influential journal . In 1955 Bataille published short books on Manet and the cave painting of Lascaux with his friend the publisher Albert Skira, the only monographs on painting written by a philosopher intended for a mass audience, both texts that have been influential on artistic practise in his home country in recent years. ==Personal life==