Michel Houellebecq on Desire and the Collapse of Western Civilization

This famous French novelist is a student of Schopenhauer — and a controversial prophet of pessimism

Cynthia Giles
Schopenhauer & Friends

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Photo by Raph Howald on Unsplash

Not to worry if you don’t recognize the name Michel Houellebecq. He’s quite famous in Europe, where literary figures are often celebrities — especially if they act out in public, or write controversial novels.

And Houellebecq (pronounced “well-beck”) qualifies on both counts.

There’s more about those qualifications below. But because I’ve been writing about Arthur Schopenhauer lately(quick intro/refresher here), I’m focusing on the fact that Houellebecq has written a short, oddly confessional book titled En présence de Schopenhauer.

To appreciate why a notorious, ultra-contemporary French author is writing about his relationship with a 19th-century German philosopher, you will want to have a basic idea of Houellebecq’s work.

So . . .

Meet Monsieur Houellebecq

Over the course of seven novels written between 1994 and 2019, Michel Houellebecq has presented a dark vision of our evolving Western culture.

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Cynthia Giles
Schopenhauer & Friends

Writer at large, Ph.D. in humanities. Persistently curious! Publishes "The Misfit Writer" on Substack. Launching Complexity Press, Autumn 2024.