Without God: Michel Houellebecq and Materialist Horror
Couldn't load pickup availability
About this book
Michel Houellebecq is Frances most famous and controversial living novelist. Since his first novel in 1994 Houellebecqs work has been called pornographic racist sexist Islamophobic and vulgar. His caricature appeared on the cover of the French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo on January 7 2015 the day that Islamist militants killed twelve people in an attack on their offices and also the day that his most recent novel Soumissionthe story of France in 2022 under a Muslim presidentappeared in bookstores. Without God uses religion as a lens to examine how Houellebecq gives voice to the underside of the progressive ethos that has animated French and Western social political and religious thought since the 1960s. Focusing on Houellebecqs complicated relationship with religion Louis Betty shows that the novelist who is at best agnostic is a deeply and unavoidably religious writer. In exploring the religious theological and philosophical aspects of Houellebecqs work Betty situates the author within the broader context of a French and Anglo-American history of ideasideas such as utopian socialism the sociology of secularization and quantum physics. Materialism Betty contends is the true destroyer of human intimacy and spirituality in Houellebecqs work; the prevailing worldview it conveys is one of nihilism and hedonism in a postmodern post-Christian Europe. In Bettys analysis materialist horror emerges as a philosophical and aesthetic concept that describes and amplifies contemporary moral and social decadence in Houellebecqs fiction.
