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René Daumal

    René Daumal was a French writer and poet whose work merged avant-garde sensibilities with profound spiritual inquiry. His experimental poetry and essays graced France's leading journals, and he co-founded the literary magazine "Le Grand Jeu," offering a distinct counterpoint to Surrealism and Dada. Daumal possessed a deep fascination with Eastern philosophies, self-studying Sanskrit to translate Buddhist texts into French. His allegorical novels delve into complex, symbolic worlds, guiding readers on journeys of introspection.

    René Daumal
    Contre-Ciel
    Mugle
    THE LIE OF THE TRUTH
    You've Always Been Wrong
    Pataphysical Essays
    Mount Analogue
    • 2012
    • 2005

      Mount Analogue

      • 160 pages
      • 6 hours of reading
      4.2(1669)Add rating

      In this novel/allegory the narrator/author sets sail in the yacht Impossible to search for Mount Analogue, the geographically located, albeit hidden, peak that reaches inexorably toward heaven.

      Mount Analogue
    • 1995

      You've Always Been Wrong is a collection of prose and poetic works by the French writer Rene Daumal (1908-1944). A fitful interloper among the Surrealists, Daumal rejected all forms of dogmatic thought, whether religious, philosophical, aesthetic, or political. Much like the Surrealists (and French theorists of more recent decades), Daumal saw in the strict forms and certainties of traditional metaphysics a type of thought that enslaves people even as it pretends to liberate them. These "cadavers of thought," Daumal wrote with youthful bravado, "must be met with storms of doubt, blasphemes, and kerosene for the temples." Daumal tied Surrealism with mystical traditions. A devoted student of Eastern religions, philosophy, and literature, he combined his skepticism about Western metaphysics with a mystic's effort to maintain intense wakefulness to the present moment and to the irreducible particularity of all objects and experience. Such wakefulness, according to Daumal, leads inevitably to an overwhelming (and redemptive) "vision of the absurd." Daumal's important place in French culture of the late 1920s and 1930s has been assured by both his writings and his role as cofounder of the avant-garde journal Le Grand Jeu. Written between 1928 and 1930, You've Always Been Wrong reveals Daumal's thought as it was coalescing around the rejection of Western metaphysics and the countervailing allure of Eastern mysticism. Thomas Vosteen's nuanced translation provides English-language readers with a provocative introduction to this iconoclastic author

      You've Always Been Wrong