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"To great writers," Walter Benjamin once wrote, "finished works
weigh lighter than those fragments on which they labor their entire
lives." Conceived in Paris in 1927 and still in progress when
Benjamin fled the Occupation in 1940, The Arcades Project (in
German, Das Passagen-Werk) is a monumental ruin, meticulously
constructed over the course of thirteen years--"the theater," as
Benjamin called it, "of all my struggles and all my ideas."
Focusing on the arcades of nineteenth-century Paris-glass-roofed
rows of shops that were early centers of consumerism--Benjamin
presents a montage of quotations from, and reflections on, hundreds
of published sources, arranging them in thirty-six categories with
descriptive rubrics such as "Fashion," "Boredom," "Dream City,"
"Photography," "Catacombs," "Advertising," "Prostitution,"
"Baudelaire," and "Theory of Progress." His central preoccupation
is what he calls the commodification of things--a process in which
he locates the decisive shift to the modern age. The Arcades
Project is Benjamin's effort to represent and to critique the
bourgeois experience of nineteenth-century history, and, in so
doing, to liberate the suppressed "true history" that underlay the
ideological mask. In the bustling, cluttered arcades, street and
interior merge and historical time is broken up into kaleidoscopic
distractions and displays of ephemera. Here, at a distance from
what is normally meant by "progress," Benjamin finds the lost
time(s) embedded in the spaces of things.
"Every line we succeed in publishing today...is a victory wrested
from the powers of darkness." So wrote Walter Benjamin in January
1940. Not long afterward, he himself would fall prey to those
powers, a victim of suicide following a failed attempt to flee the
Nazis. However insistently the idea of catastrophe hangs over
Benjamin's writings in the final years of his life, the "victories
wrested" in this period nonetheless constitute some of the most
remarkable twentieth-century analyses of the emergence of modern
society. The essays on Charles Baudelaire are the distillation of a
lifetime of thinking about the nature of modernity. They record the
crisis of meaning experienced by a civilization sliding into the
abyss, even as they testify to Benjamin's own faith in the written
word.
This volume ranges from studies of Baudelaire, Brecht, and the
historian Carl Jochmann to appraisals of photography, film, and
poetry. At their core is the question of how art can survive and
thrive in a tumultuous time. Here we see Benjamin laying out an
ethic for the critic and artist--a subdued but resilient heroism.
At the same time, he was setting forth a sociohistorical account of
how art adapts in an age of violence and repression.
Working at the height of his powers to the very end, Benjamin
refined his theory of the mass media that culminated in the final
version of his essay "The Work of Art in the Age of Its
Technological Reproducibility." Also included in this volume is his
influential piece "On the Concept of History," completed just
before his death. The book is remarkable for its inquiry into the
nature of "the modern" (especially as revealed in Baudelaire), for
its ideas about thetransmogrification of art and the radical
discontinuities of history, and for its examples of humane life and
thought in the midst of barbarism. The entire collection is
eloquent testimony to the indomitable spirit of humanity under
siege.
Radical critic of a European civilization plunging into darkness,
yet commemorator of the humane traditions of the old
bourgeoisie--such was Walter Benjamin in the later 1930s. This
volume, the third in a four-volume set, offers twenty-seven
brilliant pieces, nineteen of which have never before been
translated.
The centerpiece, "A Berlin Childhood around 1900," marks the
first appearance in English of one of the greatest German works of
the twentieth century: a profound and beautiful account of the
vanished world of Benjamin's privileged boyhood, recollected in
exile. No less remarkable are the previously untranslated second
version of Benjamin's most famous essay, "The Work of Art in the
Age of Its Technological Reproducibility," with its striking
insights into the relations between technology and aesthetics, and
"German Men and Women," a book in which Benjamin collects
twenty-six letters by distinguished Germans from 1783 to 1883 in an
effort to preserve what he called the true humanity of German
tradition from the debasement of fascism.
Volume 3 also offers extensively annotated translations of
essays that are key to Benjamin's rewriting of the story of
modernism and modernity--such as "The Storyteller" and "Paris, the
Capital of the Nineteenth Century"--as well as a fascinating diary
from 1938 and penetrating studies of Bertolt Brecht, Franz Kafka,
and Eduard Fuchs. A narrative chronology details Benjamin's life
during these four harrowing years of his exile in France and
Denmark. This is an essential collection for anyone interested in
his work.
This monograph treats one case of a series of conjectures by S.
Kudla, whose goal is to show that Fourier of Eisenstein series
encode information about the Arakelov intersection theory of
special cycles on Shimura varieties of orthogonal and unitary type.
Here, the Eisenstein series is a Hilbert modular form of weight one
over a real quadratic field, the Shimura variety is a classical
Hilbert modular surface, and the special cycles are complex
multiplication points and the Hirzebruch-Zagier divisors. By
developing new techniques in deformation theory, the authors
successfully compute the Arakelov intersection multiplicities of
these divisors, and show that they agree with the Fourier
coefficients of derivatives of Eisenstein series.
Begun in Poveromo, Italy, in 1932, and extensively revised in 1938,
Berlin Childhood around 1900 remained unpublished during Walter
Benjamin's lifetime, one of his "large-scale defeats." Now
translated into English for the first time in book form, on the
basis of the recently discovered "final version" that contains the
author's own arrangement of a suite of luminous vignettes, it can
be more widely appreciated as one of the masterpieces of
twentieth-century prose writing. Not an autobiography in the
customary sense, Benjamin's recollection of his childhood in an
upper-middle-class Jewish home in Berlin's West End at the turn of
the century becomes an occasion for unified "expeditions into the
depths of memory." In this diagram of his life, Benjamin focuses
not on persons or events but on places and things, all seen from
the perspective of a child--a collector, flaneur, and allegorist in
one. This book is also one of Benjamin's great city texts, bringing
to life the cocoon of his childhood--the parks, streets,
schoolrooms, and interiors of an emerging metropolis. It reads the
city as palimpsest and labyrinth, revealing unexpected lyricism in
the heart of the familiar. As an added gem, a preface by Howard
Eiland discusses the genesis and structure of the work, which marks
the culmination of Benjamin's attempt to do philosophy concretely.
Origin of the German Trauerspiel was Walter Benjamin's first full,
historically oriented analysis of modernity. Readers of English
know it as "The Origin of German Tragic Drama," but in fact the
subject is something else-the play of mourning. Howard Eiland's
completely new English translation, the first since 1977, is closer
to the German text and more consistent with Benjamin's
philosophical idiom. Focusing on the extravagant
seventeenth-century theatrical genre of the trauerspiel, precursor
of the opera, Benjamin identifies allegory as the constitutive
trope of the Baroque and of modernity itself. Allegorical
perception bespeaks a world of mutability and equivocation, a
melancholy sense of eternal transience without access to the
transcendentals of the medieval mystery plays-though no less
haunted and bedeviled. History as trauerspiel is the condition as
well as subject of modern allegory in its inscription of the
abyssal. Benjamin's investigation of the trauerspiel includes
German texts and late Renaissance European drama such as Hamlet and
Calderon's Life Is a Dream. The prologue is one of his most
important and difficult pieces of writing. It lays out his method
of indirection and his idea of the "constellation" as a key means
of grasping the world, making dynamic unities out of the myriad
bits of daily life. Thoroughly annotated with a philological and
historical introduction and other explanatory and supplementary
material, this rigorous and elegant new translation brings fresh
understanding to a cardinal work by one of the twentieth century's
greatest literary critics.
Walter Benjamin became a published writer at the age of
seventeen. Yet the first stirrings of this most original of
critical minds penned during the years in which he transformed
himself from the comfortable son of a haute-bourgeois German Jewish
family into the nomadic, uncompromising philosopher-critic we have
since come to appreciate have until now remained largely
unavailable in English. "Early Writings, 1910-1917" rectifies this
situation, documenting the formative intellectual experiences of
one of the twentieth century's most resolutely independent
thinkers.
Here we see the young Benjamin in his various roles as moralist,
cultural critic, school reformer, and poet-philosopher. The
diversity of interest and profundity of thought characteristic of
his better-known work from the 1920s and 30s are already in
evidence, as we witness the emergence of critical projects that
would occupy Benjamin throughout his intellectual career: the role
of the present in historical remembrance, the relationship of the
intellectual to political action, the idea of truth in works of
art, and the investigation of language as the veiled medium of
experience.
Even at this early stage, a recognizably Benjaminian way of
thinking comes into view a daring, boundary-crossing enterprise
that does away with classical antitheses in favor of the
relentlessly-seeking critical consciousness that produced the
groundbreaking works of his later years. With the publication of
these early writings, our portrait of one of the most significant
intellects of the twentieth century edges closer to completion.
TEMPO Report, Research Memorandum RM 59TMP-93.
TEMPO Report, Research Memorandum RM 59TMP-93.
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On Hashish (Paperback)
Walter Benjamin; Edited by Howard Eiland; Introduction by Marcus Boon
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R677
Discovery Miles 6 770
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Walter Benjamin's posthumously published collection of writings on
hashish is a detailed blueprint for a book that was never
written--a "truly exceptional book about hashish," as Benjamin
describes it in a letter to his friend Gershom Scholem. A series of
"protocols of drug experiments," written by himself and his
co-participants between 1927 and 1934, together with short prose
pieces that he published during his lifetime, "On Hashish" provides
a peculiarly intimate portrait of Benjamin, venturesome as ever at
the end of the Weimar Republic, and of his unique form of thought.
Consciously placing himself in a tradition of literary
drug-connoisseurs from Baudelaire to Hermann Hesse, Benjamin looked
to hashish and other drugs for an initiation into what he called
"profane illumination." At issue here, as everywhere in Benjamin's
work, is a new way of seeing, a new connection to the ordinary
world. Under the influence of hashish, as time and space become
inseparable, experiences become subtly stratified and resonant: we
inhabit more than one plane in time. What Benjamin, in his
contemporaneous study of Surrealism, calls "image space" comes
vividly to life in this philosophical immersion in the
sensuous.
This English-language edition of "On Hashish" features a
section of supplementary materials--drawn from Benjamin's essays,
letters, and sketches--relating to hashish use, as well as a
reminiscence by his friend Jean Selz, which concerns a night of
opium-smoking in Ibiza. A preface by Howard Eiland discusses the
leading motifs of Benjamin's reflections on intoxication.
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