Pornocracy
Translated by Paul Buck and Catherine Petit
Introduction by Chris Kraus, Afterword by Peter Sotos
Interview with Catherine Breillat by Dorna Khazeni.
As celebrated as it is reviled,
internationally acclaimed filmmaker Catherine Breillat's novel
Pornocracy viscerally enacts the dramatic confluence
of mystery, desire, and shame that lies at the heart of sexuality.
In Pornocracy, a beautiful woman wanders through a gay disco
and engages a man, confident that he will follow her. Perversely
and dispassionately, she offers her body as the ground of
a ritualistic game in which, over the course of three evenings,
the two will explore the numbing mechanics of sexual brutality.
What follows is an exchange between a man and a woman that
is both frankly sexual and deeply philosophical.
Adapted and directed for film in France
by Breillat as Anatomy of Hell (2004), Pornocracy
leads the reader through an undulating and atmospheric exploration
of the criminal and the erotic, finally climaxing in a place
well beyond more familiar moral terrain. Although Breillat's
films—most recently Fat Girl (2001) and Romance
(1999)—are well known to international audiences, this
publication marks her literary debut in America. It will demonstrate
that Breillat's famous films are but one aspect of her strikingly
original poetic and philosophical vision.
Catherine Breillat is a filmmaker
and writer based in Paris. She is known not only for her films
focusing on themes of sexuality, but also for her best-selling
novels. Pornocracy is the first of her novels to be published
in English.