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Without God

Page 21

by Louis Betty


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  Morrey, Douglas. 2013. Michel Houellebecq: Humanity and Its Aftermath. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press.

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  Muray, Philippe. 1999. “Et, en tout, apercevoir la fin.” L’Atelier du Roman, June 18.

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  INDEX

  Against the World, Against Life, 117

  description of Lovecraftian cosmos, 105. See also Lovecraft, Howard Phillips

  introduction to, 114

  Althusser, 75, 77

  American reception of Houellebecq, 13

  atheism

  atheistic humanism, 11, 76, 130, 1
35, 139

  Daniel’s atheism in The Possibility of An Island, 20

  Houellebecq on, 45, 129, 146 n. 7

  Rediger on, 135–36

  Bataille, 3

  Baudelaire, 3, 142, 147 n. 7

  Beauvoir, Simone de, 84

  Bernanos, Georges, 144–45 n. 8

  Bourdieu, 75

  Bourget, Paul, 101

  Brunnetière, Ferdinand, 101

  Burke, Edmund, 145–46 n. 1

  Camus, 13, 77

  Carnap, Rudolf, 22

  Catholicism

  Catholic renaissance, 101–3

  Comte on, 90

  conversion to Catholicism: in Submission, 129–30, 132; in The Map and the Territory, 102

  decline of Catholicism, 31, 139; in France, 42–45

  depiction of Catholic priests, 144–45 n. 8; in The Map and the Territory, 44; in Whatever, 31, 43–45

  and Islam, 131

  return to Catholicism, 16

  Charlie Hebdo, 71, 122–23

  Christianity

  Comte on, 50, 94–95

  decline of Christianity in Europe, 33–34, 46, 60, 135, 139

  early, parallel with Elohimism, 64.

  and Elohimism, 31, 35, 72

  and Islam, 52, 73, 123

  medieval Christianity, 88, 139–40

  Saint-Simon on, 77, 86–89

  similarities with Islam, 130

  Claudel, Paul, 101

  Comte, 33, 47, 95–97, 140

  on the decline of Christianity, 50, 94–95

  on eternal life, 49–50, 91

  Houellebecq’s critique of Comte’s ideas about eternal life, 50–51, 91–92

  law of the three stages, 89

  perception of Catholicism, 90

  on religion, 49

  religion of humanity, 3, 16, 49–50, 78, 90

  on rights, 92–93. See also Fourier

  Viard on, 3

  view of monotheism, 90

  on women, 93–94

  Coppée, François, 101–2

  Dantec, Maurice, 3

  D’Aurevilly, Barbey, 147 n. 7

  Descartes, 22, 144 n. 2

  Diderot, 78

  Durkheim, 15

  definition of religion, 47, 51

  sacred and the profane, the, 59, 63–64

  Duteurtre, Benoît, 3

  Elementary Particles, The

  Americanization, 8–10

  Annabelle, 21, 37–38, 40, 104, 116

  Annick, 21, 39–40

  Asad’s theories of religion, as mise-en-scène of, 60

  Bruno: on life after death, 39; sexual obsession, 37

  Christiane, 36–37, 40, 82

  Cruickshank on, 2

  Desplechin, 12, 33

  Djerzinski: on religion, 33; on women, 83, 93

  escape from materialism, 29–30. See also materialism

  Kakutani on, 13

  Lieu du Changement, 36

  meaning of use of quantum physics, 29. See also quantum physics

  Meditations on Interweaving, 29, 87

  Muray on, 105

  and naturalism, 144 n. 1. See also Naturalism

  Elohimism, 15–16, 97

  disciplinary aspect of, 68–70

  doctrine of, 61–63, 146 n. 2

  and euthanasia, 58

  immortality, 48, 61, 64–65

  and Islam, 71–73

  and materialism, 48–49, 52

  parallel with early Christianity, 64

  and positivism, 50

  prophet of, 61, 64

  and “religare,” 60–63

  rise of, 31, 35, 48, 57, 79

  and the sacred and the profane, 63–64. See also Durkheim

  suicide ritual, 64. See also suicide

  and the supernatural, 64–66

  Engels, 77

  Enlightenment, 133, 139–41

  critique of, 135, 141

  and the decline of Christianity, 94. See also Christianity

  and Islam, 139. See also Islam

  radical enlightenment, 78

  shortcomings of, 17, 123, 140

  euthanasia

  of the elderly, 48, 57

  and Elohimism, 58

  legality of euthanasia, 144 n. 1

  opposition to, 41–42. See also Schopenhauer

  feminism, 6, 127

  antifeminism, 3

  and de Beauvoir, 84

  and Fourier, 82

  Sweeney on, 143 n. 1

  Flaubert, 22. See also Realism

  Foucault, 13, 75–76

  Fourier, 14, 16, 77–78, 96–97, 146 n. 4

  affinities with Saint-Simon, 89

  on children and child-rearing, 84–85

  on human rights, 85

  and Marx, 95

  on numerical organization of utopia, 85–86

  on sexuality, 80–82

  on women, 82–84

  Frankfurt School, 136

  Glucksmann, André, 76

  Hegel, G. W. F., 22

  Houellebecq (character), 17–18

  conversion to Catholicism in The Map and the Territory, 102. See also Catholicism

  humanism

  atheistic humanism, 11, 76, 130, 135, 139

  secular humanism, 73

  Huysmans, Joris-Karl, 101, 134, 136

  conversion to Catholicism, 129, 132. See also Catholicism

  Interventions II

  “Approches du désarroi,” 34

  erotic hierarchy, 10, 80

  “J’ai un rêve,” 91

  “L’humanité, second stade,” 84

  “Préliminaires au positivism,” 49

  Proguidis, Lakis, 24, 30

  Solanas, Valerie, 84, 93–94

  Islam, 13, 52, 91

  as alternative to atheistic humanism, 124. See also humanism

  collapse of in The Possibility of An Island, 31, 35, 57, 73

  conversion to, 17, 128, 132, 134–36

  Elohimism as alternative to, 16, 72–73. See also Elohimism

  “great replacement,” 135

  Islamicization, 71, 100, 122

  Islamic State, 141

  Islamophobia, 17, 71, 123, 145 n. 6

  Lévi-Strauss on, 71

  medieval Islam, 140

  and Positivism, 139

  Quran, 71

  similarity with Christianity, 130

  Spinoza on, 71

  “stupidest religion” comment, 71, 123

  and women, 125, 127–28

  Kant, 26, 92, 119

  La Mettrie, Julien Offray de, 78

  Lanzarote, 143 n. 6

  Le Pen, Marine, 122, 131

  Lévy, Bernard-Henri, 76, 143 n. 7

  Littell, Jonathan, 3

  Lovecraft, Howard Phillips, 143 n. 7, 146 n. 6

  origins of materialist horror, 113–17

  Maistre, Joseph de, 142

  Maoism, 75–76

  Map and the Territory, The

  capitalism of the countryside, 16, 100

  and Catholic renaissance, 102. See also Catholicism

  Châtelus-le-Marcheix, 99

  contents of fictional Houellebecq’s library, 95

  conversion to Catholicism, 102. See also Catholicism

  depiction of Catholic priests, 44. See also Catholicism

  euthanasia of Jean-Pierre Martin, 41–42. See also euthanasia

  and evolution of Houellebecq’s work, 13, 16, 103

  immigration, 13, 100

  Martin’s final art project, 12, 104

  Marxism, 11, 75–76, 89

  Marx, 22, 76–78, 95

  Marx and Fourier, 96

  materialism

  “age of materialism,” 11, 29, 60, 88

  Bellanger on, 4

  comparison with Islam, 71. See also Islam

  and Elohimism, 48, 52, 56. See also Elohimism

  Jeffery on, 5

  materialist horror: and Lovecraft, 113–17; and moral secularization, 43, 45; and Pascal, 117–20; and sexual liberalism, 10; as experimental approach to
literature, 105; Houellebecq’s use of term, 143 n. 7; instances of, 105–9 (See also Whatever)

  metaphysics of materialism, 87

  and Newtonian mechanics, 29–30, 87

  postmaterialism in The Elementary Particles, 29–30. See also The Elementary Particles

  principal experimental condition of Houellebecq’s work, 22, 46

  relation to: capitalism, 4, 8–12; suicide, 35–42 (See also suicide)

  and Robespierre, 78–79

  Maugham, Somerset, 103

  Mauriac, François, 101

  Millet, Richard, 3

  National Front, 71, 122

  Naturalism

  and The Elementary Particles, 144 n. 1

  and Huysmans, 129

  literary, 143–44 n. 1

  and Zola, 22

  Neurath, Otto, 22

  Nietzsche, 3, 22

  Djerzinski on, 92

  Houellebecq on, 93, 119

  Nouveaux philosophes, 76

  Pascal, 15, 17, 112–13

  origins of materialist horror, 117–20. See also materialism

  Péguy, Charles, 101

  Platform

  Colombani on, 109

  Eldorador Aphrodite, 82, 97

  erotic philanthropy, 82. See also Fourier

  on Islam, 71–72, 91

  Maslin on, 13

  Robert, 14

  sex tourism, 6, 82

  Valérie, 72, 97

  on Western sexuality, 110–12

  political correctness, 3, 13

  Positivism, 4, 14, 86, 89

  in Brazil, 96

  Houellebecq’s utopia as mise-en-scène of Positivism, 16

  and Islam, 139

  and materialism, 49. See also Comte

  positivist catechism, 90. See also Comte

  Possibility of An Island, The

  Biblical structure, 3, 48, 145 n. 1

  Esther, 14, 54–56, 58, 60

  euthanasia, 48, 57, 64. See also euthanasia

  “Future Ones,” 62, 69, 97

  “human savages,” 57–58, 68, 70, 116

  Isabelle, 53–54, 56, 61

  “life story,” 57, 62, 69, 97, 116, 119

  as mise-en-scène of Asad’s theories of religion, 60, 68–71,

  Miskiewicz, 48, 64–65

  Nazism, 53–54

  prophet, 61, 64

  Supreme Sister, 62, 68–69, 92

  Updike on, 13

  posthumanism, 13

  comparison with prehumanism, 98

  Morrey on, 2

  posthuman clone society of The Possibility of An Island, 16

  Public Enemies

  Colombani’s review of Platform, 109

  Houellebecq’s childhood encounter with Pascal, 118. See also Pascal

 

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