The Atrocity Exhibition

eBook, 169 pages

English language

Published Oct. 14, 2009 by HarperCollins Publishers.

ISBN:
978-0-00-732219-0
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4 stars (1 review)

First published in 1970 and widely regarded as a prophetic masterpiece, this is a groundbreaking experimental novel by the acclaimed author of ‘Crash’ and ‘Super-Cannes’.

The irrational, all-pervading violence of the modern world is the subject of this extraordinary tour de force.

The central character’s dreams are haunted by images of John F. Kennedy and Marilyn Monroe, dead astronauts and car-crash victims as he traverses the screaming wastes of nervous breakdown. Seeking his sanity, he casts himself in a number of roles: H-bomber pilot, presidential assassin, crash victim, psychopath. Finally, through the black, perverse magic of violence he transcends his psychic turmoil to find the key to a bizarre new sexuality.

In this revised edition, Ballard has added extensive annotation that help to unlock many of the mysteries of one of the most prophetic, enigmatic and original works of the late twentieth century.

1 edition

Sex and Psychosis

4 stars

Cool post-modern prose that rewrites psychoanalytic academic texts into self-studies of psychosexual psychoses. Each chapter starts anew with the same cast and a new theme that throws a warped scientific light on the many collective traumas and obsessions of the modern era.

It's stylistically clinically detached from the developing sexual perversions it exhibits, presenting them neutrally to the reader like a science paper, with the female form reduced to geographic and anatomic terms, as warm as a cadaver on an autopsy table. This is less sci-fi and more psy-fi: beneath the cold clinical veneer pulses a black heart of primal human behaviour, Freud's love and thanatos freebasing. No wonder the cool kids from art school lapped this stuff up.

However, there is incohesion, even if this is an anthology book of previous works. While there are some classic pieces included like "Why I Want to Fuck Ronald Reagan", they feel …