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Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Literary studies > From 1900
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Necessary Angels - Tradition and Modernity in Kafka, Benjamin and Scholem (Hardcover)
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Necessary Angels - Tradition and Modernity in Kafka, Benjamin and Scholem (Hardcover)
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In four chapters, Robert Alter explains the prismlike radiance
created by the association of three modern masters, Franz Kafka,
Walter Benjamin, and Gershom Scholem. The volume pinpoints the
intersections of these divergent witnesses to the modern condition
of doubt, no-man's-land between traditional religion and modern
secular culture. Scholem, the devoted Zionist and master historian
of Jewish mysticism, and Benjamin, the Marxist cultural critic,
dedicated much of their thought and correspondence to Kafka, the
explorer in fiction of radical alienation. Kafka's sense of
spiritual complexities was an inspiration to both thinkers in their
resistance to the murderous simplification of totalitarian
ideology. In "Necessary Angels" Alter uncovers a moment when the
future of modernism is revealed in its preoccupation with the past.
The angel of the title is first Kafka's: on June 25, 1914, the
writer recorded in his diary a dream vision of an angel that turned
into the painted wooden figurehead of a ship. In 1940, at the end
of his life, Walter Benjamin devoted the ninth of his "These on the
Philosophy of History" to a meditation on an angel by the artist
Paul Klee, first quoting a poem he had written on that painting. In
Benjamin's vision the figure from Klee becomes an angel of history,
sucked into the future by the storm of progress, his face looking
back to Eden. Benjamin bequesthed the Klee oil painting to Scholem;
it hung in the living room of Scholem's home on Abarbanel Street in
Jerusalem until 1989, when his widow placed it in the Israel
Museum. Alter's focus on the epiphanic force of memory on these
three great modernists shows that a complete break with tradition
is not essential to modernism. "Necessary Angels" itself continues
the necessary discovery of the future in the past.
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