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Seller's Description:
Very Good. Stated First Printing. Hardcover and dust jacket. Minor creasing to dust jacket. Small tear to dj. Good binding and cover. Clean, unmarked pages. Light wear. 248 pages, 22 cm.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good in Good jacket. First/first US. Stated, first printing. Octavo in edgeworn dustjacket with small splotch of damp staining verso of front jacket panel and some black ink transfer. Moderate darkening/foxing to DJ verso. Flap is not clipped. Black cloth covered boards with stamped magenta foil & silver foil lettering along spine edge. Pink topstained textblock, slight discoloring from dust staining. Spine is leaning sllightly. A few scattered marginal tick marks and paragraph markings through interior text. 248 pages.,
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Seller's Description:
Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. Hardcover. 8vo. George Braziller, Inc., New York. 1971. 248 pgs. First Edition/First Printing. DJ has light shelf-wear present to the DJ extremities. Bound in cloth boards with titles present to the spine. Boards have light shelf-wear present to the extremities. No ownership marks present. Text is clean and free of marks. Binding tight and solid. In his stunning essay, Coldness and Cruelty, Gilles Deleuze provides a rigorous and informed philosophical examination of the work of the late 19th-century German novelist Leopold von Sacher-Masoch. Deleuze's essay, certainly the most profound study yet produced on the relations between sadism and masochism, seeks to develop and explain Masoch's "peculiar way of 'desexualizing' love while at the same time sexualizing the entire history of humanity." He shows that masochism is something far more subtle and complex than the enjoyment of pain, that masochism has nothing to do with sadism; their worlds do not communicate, just as the genius of those who created them-Masoch and Sade-lie stylistically, philosophically, and politically poles a part. Venus in Furs, the most famous of all of Masoch's novels was written in 1870 and belongs to an unfinished cycle of works that Masoch entitled The Heritage of Cain. The cycle was to treat a series of themes including love, war, and death. The present work is about love. Although the entire constellation of symbols that has come to characterize the masochistic syndrome can be found here-fetishes, whips, disguises, fur-clad women, contracts, humiliations, punishment, and always the volatile presence of a terrible coldness-these do not eclipse the singular power of Masoch's eroticism. EB; 1.1 x 8.2 x 5.7 Inches; 248 pages.