The Torture Garden

The Torture Garden

by Octave Mirbeau
The Torture Garden

The Torture Garden

by Octave Mirbeau

Paperback

$32.99 
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Overview

Originally published in 1899, this early work by Octave Mirbeau is both expensive and hard to find in its first edition. It contains several sections in different styles dealing with subjects as diverse as French politics and sadism. This is a fascinating work and thoroughly recommended for anyone interested in the decadent fiction of nineteenth century France. Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce. We are republishing these classic works in affordable, high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781409727682
Publisher: Charles Press Pubs(PA)
Publication date: 06/19/2008
Pages: 124
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.29(d)

About the Author

Octave Mirbeau (1848-1917) was a radical journalist who is best known today for his decadent classic, Torture Garden and his satire of Parisian society in the wake of the Dreyfus affair, The Diary of a Chambermaid. His first novel Le Calvaire was a succes de scandale followed a year later by Abbe Jules. Together with Sebastien Roch these novels form a very powerful indictment of French society as seen from an anarchist's perspective and are Mirbeau's revenge on society for his upbringing.

Michael Richardson is a critic, academic and translator. He has created one of the most important collections of surrealist writing in English in the two-volume anthology: The Dedalus Book of Surrealism.

Highly acclaimed and prolific fantasy and sci novelist, critic and translator.

Read an Excerpt

The Torture Garden, written by Octave Mirbeau in 1899, is one of the most extreme books ever to be published. Ostensibly dealing with the theme of torture as a refined art form in China, and depicting a dissolute bureaucrat led by an extraordinary woman into the depths of depravity, this is an absolute black humor critique of the values of Western Civilization with its duplicitous rules of social conduct and political power-brokering. A totally contemporary indictment of corruption in government, this work also lays bare the politics of the conservative scientific establishment and the evil inherent in bureaucracy. Additionally, the Colonialist mentality with its brutish institutionalized killings of natives and animals is vividly contrasted with the exquisite tortures of the garden.

The glittering, fantastic Torture Garden itself has all the hallucinatory brightness of a dream straight form the unconscious-that fertile pool nourishing the uninhibited artistic imagination. There seems a direct lineage of descent from the horrific painted visions of Bosch to the written splendors of Mirbeau's work. Both appear steeped in enigma and allusion, fed from the same inexhaustible springs of diabolical invention that well up from deep within the human psyche-the eternal playground of sex and death.

This book offers a rare portrait of a woman of intelligence and sensitivity who progressively reveals greater dimensions of curiosity, courage, honesty and philosophic overview as she relentlessly pursues more complex and challenging experiences. In the process the much-vaunted corruption and worldly wisdom of the European male narrator is unmasked as paltry cowardice and worse still-moral conservatism that is pathetically shallow. His is a petty little soul and hers the soul of a great adventuress.

Written at a time when all authoritarian "laws" of aesthetics and morality were being challenged (and breached) by anarchists, Decadents, Naturalists, Impressionists, and pre-Surrealists, The Torture Garden appended its vision of terminal outrage to the final year of the nineteenth century. The author, Octave Mirbeau (1850-1917) was an exceptional writer who combined intensity of vision with a lifelong commitment to attacking arbitrary, unjust authority. As a journalist Mirbeau railed against conservative art and political opinions as well as hypocritical public figures-which caused him to fight numerous duels. Till the end of his long career as a critic, novelist and playwright he was dedicated to permanent, sardonic, and vociferous rebellion against the status quo. He and his wife, a former actress and herself a luminary of wit and independence, held host to some of the most radical artists and writers of the day. After his death she made their estate a retreat and haven for indignant writers, artists, poets and sculptors possessing dreams and visions but little else.

As a critique of society The Torture Garden is an enduring inspiration: "You're obliged to pretend respect for people and institutions you think absurd. You live attached in a cowardly fashion to moral and social conventions you despise, condemn, and know lack all foundation. It is that permanent contradiction between your ideas and desires and all the dead formalities and vain pretense of your civilization which makes you sad, troubled and unbalanced. In that intolerance conflict you lose all joy of life and all feeling of personality, because at every moment they suppress and restrain and check the free play of your powers. That's the poisoned and mortal wound of the civilized world."

Solely on the level of literary achievement, The Torture Garden's beauty of language and imagery ensures our transport into a realm not of this earth. Its recitation of the names of exotic plants and perfumes lures us into an erotic dimension of limitless possibilities, conjured into being by the repressed underside of the human spirit-the reward at the end being the same as in the mythical Garden of Eden: self-knowledge . . .

Once described as "the most sickening work of art of the nineteenth century," The Torture Garden is one of the most truly original works ever imagined. Beyond providing a richly poetic experience, it will stimulate anyone interested in the always-contemporary problem of the limits of experience and sensation. As part of the continuing struggle against censorship and especially self-censorship, it will remain a landmark in the fight against all that would suppress the creation of a far freer world.

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