The Damp and the Dry

sub-heading:
A Brief Incursion into Fascist Territory
A penetrating investigation into fascist psychology and language, written by the author of The Kindly Ones.
₹1,916.08
₹1,628.67

Pre-order now at 15% off. Books will ship in July.

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  • 144 pages
  • Paperback ISBN 9781682194898
  • E-book ISBN 9781682194904

about the bookabout

The Damp and the Dry is a critical biography and theoretical case study by Jonathan Littell of Léon Degrelle, Belgium’s highest-ranking Nazi collaborator and a fanatical Waffen-SS officer who fought on the Eastern Front during the Second World War. Admired by Hitler and Mussolini and later sheltered by Franco in Spain, Degrelle embodied the figure of the fascist true believer long after the defeat of the Third Reich.

Originally published in French as Le sec et l’humide (Gallimard, 2008) and translated into numerous languages, the book subjects Degrelle’s extensive autobiographical writings—especially his memoir The Russian Campaign—to a forensic reading. Littell dissects Degrelle’s prose to expose what he terms an “anatomy of fascist discourse”: a recurring set of metaphors, obsessions, and psychic structures through which fascist ideology understands the body, violence, purity, and the enemy.

Building on the work of German sociologist Klaus Theweleit, whose Afterword accompanies the text, The Damp and the Dry moves beyond biography to reveal how fascism thinks and speaks. It is a disturbing and incisive study of authoritarian mentality—one that illuminates not only the history of twentieth-century fascism, but its enduring rhetorical and psychological appeal.

About The Author / Editor

Photograph © xyz Jonathan Littell was born in 1967 in New York City and grew up in France. He worked for many years in humanitarian emergency operations in Bosnia, Chechnya, Afghanistan, D. R. Congo, and other countries. His literary debut, The Kindly Ones (HarperCollins 2009), won the Prix Goncourt when it was first published in France as Les Bienveillantes in 2006, and has since been translated into nearly 40 languages. His other works available in English include The Fata Morgana Books (Two Lines Press 2013), Triptych: Three Studies after Francis Bacon (Notting Hill Editions 2013), and Syrian Notebooks: Inside the Homs Uprising (Verso 2015). His first feature documentary film, Wrong Elements, was presented at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2016.

Klaus Theweleit is a German sociologist. He is best known for his two-volume study of the psychology of Nazism, Male Fantasies (University of Minnesota Press, 1987–89), first published in Germany as Männerphantasien in 1977–78.

Max Lawton is a translator of Russian, French, German, Spanish, Italian, and Turkish. He is the translator of eight novels by Vladimir Sorokin, including Telluria (New York Review Books Classics 2022) and Their Four Hearts (Dalkey Archive Press 2022).

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The Damp and the Dry

sub-heading:
A Brief Incursion into Fascist Territory
A penetrating investigation into fascist psychology and language, written by the author of The Kindly Ones.
₹1,916.08
₹1,628.67

Pre-order now at 15% off. Books will ship in July.

Pre-Order Now

Adding to cart… The item has been added

about the bookabout

The Damp and the Dry is a critical biography and theoretical case study by Jonathan Littell of Léon Degrelle, Belgium’s highest-ranking Nazi collaborator and a fanatical Waffen-SS officer who fought on the Eastern Front during the Second World War. Admired by Hitler and Mussolini and later sheltered by Franco in Spain, Degrelle embodied the figure of the fascist true believer long after the defeat of the Third Reich.

Originally published in French as Le sec et l’humide (Gallimard, 2008) and translated into numerous languages, the book subjects Degrelle’s extensive autobiographical writings—especially his memoir The Russian Campaign—to a forensic reading. Littell dissects Degrelle’s prose to expose what he terms an “anatomy of fascist discourse”: a recurring set of metaphors, obsessions, and psychic structures through which fascist ideology understands the body, violence, purity, and the enemy.

Building on the work of German sociologist Klaus Theweleit, whose Afterword accompanies the text, The Damp and the Dry moves beyond biography to reveal how fascism thinks and speaks. It is a disturbing and incisive study of authoritarian mentality—one that illuminates not only the history of twentieth-century fascism, but its enduring rhetorical and psychological appeal.

About The Author / Editor

Photograph © xyz Jonathan Littell was born in 1967 in New York City and grew up in France. He worked for many years in humanitarian emergency operations in Bosnia, Chechnya, Afghanistan, D. R. Congo, and other countries. His literary debut, The Kindly Ones (HarperCollins 2009), won the Prix Goncourt when it was first published in France as Les Bienveillantes in 2006, and has since been translated into nearly 40 languages. His other works available in English include The Fata Morgana Books (Two Lines Press 2013), Triptych: Three Studies after Francis Bacon (Notting Hill Editions 2013), and Syrian Notebooks: Inside the Homs Uprising (Verso 2015). His first feature documentary film, Wrong Elements, was presented at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2016.

Klaus Theweleit is a German sociologist. He is best known for his two-volume study of the psychology of Nazism, Male Fantasies (University of Minnesota Press, 1987–89), first published in Germany as Männerphantasien in 1977–78.

Max Lawton is a translator of Russian, French, German, Spanish, Italian, and Turkish. He is the translator of eight novels by Vladimir Sorokin, including Telluria (New York Review Books Classics 2022) and Their Four Hearts (Dalkey Archive Press 2022).

Preview

Coming Soon

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