Violence and Derision, the story of a battle between the have-nots and the haves and the powerless and the powerful, where all the art and ingenuity and moral advantage lies with the
outcast and the downtrodden, is set in the capital of an imaginary (but all too imaginable) Middle Eastern country governed by a tyrannical buffoon. A small number of dedicated opponents to the
regime band together to fight the inanity of power with the power of ridicule. They begin a poster and graffiti campaign that is intended to provoke the population at large into an uprising of
irresistible hilarity.
Albert Cossery was a French writer of Egyptian origin, who led a dandy’s life of determined leisure for all his ninety-some years while turning out a handful of perfect fictions—delightful
anarchistic fables featuring a cast of lowlifes and no-goods, and combining perfect stylistic poise with ferocious satire.