This book introduces the Marquis de Sade as writer and philosopher to
new readers, offering concise but comprehensive surveys of his most
controversial works, based on contemporary theoretical approaches. The
style is lively and accessible without sacrificing detail or depth.
An introductory chapter discusses Sade's life and the links between that
and his work. Relying on the many letters he wrote to his wife and
lawyer from prison and on other authentic, contemporary evidence, it
attempts to disentangle this life from the various myths that Sade's
demonic reputation has engendered throughout the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries. This initial chapter also reviews the critical
corpus or reception of the work since Sade's times up to the present,
and reassesses his status as an extra-canonical writer. The following
six chapters provide broad coverage of Sade's main intellectual and
creative activities, showing how all can be seen as the expression of a
veritable cult of the body, a veneration of the physical, and the sexual
as channels of transcendence.