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L'Inassouvissement (1930)

par Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz

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276295,302 (3.58)24
Correspondences of Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, also known as Witkacy, with his wife, Jadwiga. The book contains 238 letters, notes, postcards and telegrams written from March 21, 1923 to December 31, 1927, during the time he stayed in Warsaw where his wife lived. They present the testimony of the complicated love between these two people, as well as how their marriage survived during hard times. The book also describes the life and creations of Witkacy, an avant-garde Polish artist.… (plus d'informations)
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A challenging, vengeful, manic, weird, gloriously random, obscure panegyric. A dystopian, war-like, anti-war novel. The Polish Gravity's Rainbow, rendered less comprehensible via translation. There is still a lot to gain, absorb and relish about this book, even if every other sentence goes in one ear and out the other. The punning goes on and on an on, and examine the evidence of hundreds of notes before deciding whether your efforts to understand this book in its entirety are worthwhile. Self-references abound, along with comments on war, personal hygiene, lots of phallocentric jokes, goofy asides, well-formed rational arguments alongside pure, indulgent sexual fantasy.

Like Wyndham Lewis' The Apes of God, this is a book adored by other writers (among them Gombrowicz) but difficult for readers of our age to appreciate. A profusion of characters carry on conversations containing so many scattered references of the early Twentieth Century European variety, that you will undoubtedly feel mind-boggled at some point, unless you are an expert in that slice of political history.

The anti-imperialism undercurrent is a little distracting, but so is everything else. This is a big book of distractions. A high-brow, low-brow grimacing anomaly.

I much prefer Alfred Doblin's Berlin Alexanderplatz and the aforementioned work of Wyndham Lewis. But Genezip feels akin to Pynchon's protagonists in that we rarely get the chance to form a picture of his adventures because so many contradictions and accusations and thoughts and digressions interpolate the flow of narrative, but his charm and obvious intelligence inspire confidence, and keep us turning pages (hopefully). Brilliantly witty in parts, abstruse and variable in its literary delivery of straight-faced fecal humor, Insatiability is a way-ahead-of-its-time tome.

It will superimpose a unique frame of mind upon your own. Some call it an experimental masterpiece. I call it a guaranteed amusing, re-readable puzzle, that is both tiresome and impenetrable, while never ceasing to enjoy it out of the crevices of my squinting-with-consternation eyes. ( )
  LSPopovich | Apr 8, 2020 |
Insatiability, by Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz is a difficult book to explain. It fits within the strange and perverse literary universe, between Lautréamont's Songs of Maldoror and Alfred Jarry's Days & Nights. Complicated, perverse and at times unwieldy, I was mesmerized and overwhelmed, simultaneously. I vacillated between being unable to put the book down, to being incapable of reading another sentence; but I finished it.

Oddly, I encountered Witkiewicz, Witacy, when I was 16, but did not know it at the time. I used to skip classes while in high school and I would spend my days at the college library. I was wander through the stacks and read whatever seemed leaped out at me. One day it was a book of surrealist plays, once which was titled, The Water Hen. I read it, I did not understand it very well, but I always remembered it. The playwright's name did not stay with me however, (due to its difficult Polish name) and I went through life with this play and no author. Then I came across Insatiability and its author and realized the connection. Nothing, not ever that play, with its absurdist plot and its suicidal, nihilistic overtones, could prepare me for the madness of this novel.

Written in a language that is fantastic and punful, even in translation, with grotesque and unreal characters; it has a basic story plot: a coming of age story for the main character, Genezip Kapen, and his initiation into the sexual world of women. His initial sexual, romantic relationship (and involvement with a group of artistic sadists) eventually corrupts him and he loses his mind. Genezip, or Zip, runs off to join the military and then has a few more mind-loosening romances, which he ends up committing and participating in some unforeseeable acts. Zip occupies an unsettling world, where Europe is under threat of Communist China's takeover, and Poland is embroiled in war with China.

Overall, Insatiability is a difficult novel to write about, because it spans so many ideas that it would take another book to explain it all. It doesn't deal with the development of characters, rather, the characters- like Zip, are an unfolding of a reaction. What happens when a young, freedom seeker comes into contact with decadence, artistic ideas, unfettered sexuality, and war? It is as though Witkiewicz decided to conduct an experiment in a future world where values and intimacy and been replaced by lust and neurosis, and the novel became the document. Witkiewicz wrote Insatiability during the two world wars; the erosion of idealism and the political anxiety for the future are presented. Witkiewicz throws his combating constructs of art, politics, and individuality into the word mix which make up this novel. A painter, playwright, philosopher, he used his novels as a hulking receptacle where these raucous conceits run amok. ( )
6 voter lisa_emily | May 10, 2007 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewiczauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Lesman, KarolPostfaceauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Lesman, KarolTraducteurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé

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Scegliendo il mio destino
ho scelto la pazzia.
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Correspondences of Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, also known as Witkacy, with his wife, Jadwiga. The book contains 238 letters, notes, postcards and telegrams written from March 21, 1923 to December 31, 1927, during the time he stayed in Warsaw where his wife lived. They present the testimony of the complicated love between these two people, as well as how their marriage survived during hard times. The book also describes the life and creations of Witkacy, an avant-garde Polish artist.

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