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An advanced introduction to Benjamin's work and its actualization
for our own times. Walter Benjamin (1892-1940) has emerged as one
of the leading cultural critics of the twentieth century. His work
encompasses aesthetics, metaphysical language and narrative
theories, German literary history, philosophies of history, the
intersection of Marxism and Messianic thought, urban topography,
and the development of photography and film. Benjamin defined the
task of the critic as one that blasts endangered moments of the
past out of the continuum of history so that they attain new
significance. This volume of new essays employs this principle of
actualization as its methodological program in offering a new
advanced introduction to Benjamin's own work. The essays analyze
Benjamin's central texts, themes, terminologies, and genres in
their original contexts while simultaneously situating them in new
parameters, such as contemporary media, memory culture,
constructions of gender, postcoloniality, and theories of urban
topographies. The Companion brings together an international group
of established and emerging scholars to explicate Benjamin's
actuality from a multidisciplinary perspective. Designed for
audiences interested in literary criticism, cultural studies, and
neighboring disciplines, the volume serves as a stimulus for new
debates about Benjamin's intellectual legacy today. Contributors:
Wolfgang Bock, Willi Bolle, Dianne Chisholm, Adrian Daub, Dominik
Finkelde, Eric Jarosinski, Lutz Koepnick, Vivian Liska, Karl Ivan
Solibakke, Marc de Wilde, Bernd Witte Rolf J. Goebel is
Distinguished Professor of German and Chair of the Department of
WorldLanguages and Cultures at the University of Alabama in
Huntsville.
An advanced introduction to Benjamin's work and its actualization
for our own times. Walter Benjamin (1892-1940) has emerged as one
of the leading cultural critics of the twentieth century. His work
encompasses aesthetics, metaphysical language and narrative
theories, German literary history, philosophies of history, the
intersection of Marxism and Messianic thought, urban topography,
and the development of photography and film. Benjamin defined the
task of the critic as one that blasts endangered moments of the
past out of the continuum of history so that they attain new
significance. This volume of new essays employs this principle of
actualization as its methodological program in offering a new
advanced introduction to Benjamin's own work. The essays analyze
Benjamin's central texts, themes, terminologies, and genres in
their original contexts while simultaneously situating them in new
parameters, such as contemporary media, memory culture,
constructions of gender, postcoloniality, and theories of urban
topographies. The Companion brings together an international group
of established and emerging scholars to explicate Benjamin's
actuality from a multidisciplinary perspective. Designed for
audiences interested in literary criticism, cultural studies, and
neighboring disciplines, the volume serves as a stimulus for new
debates about Benjamin's intellectual legacy today. Contributors:
Wolfgang Bock, Willi Bolle, Dianne Chisholm, Adrian Daub, Dominik
Finkelde, Eric Jarosinski, Lutz Koepnick, Vivian Liska, Karl Ivan
Solibakke, Marc de Wilde, Bernd Witte Rolf J. Goebel is
Distinguished Professor of German and Chair of the Department of
WorldLanguages and Cultures at the University of Alabama in
Huntsville.
Queer Constellations investigates the dreams and catastrophes of
recent urban history viewed through new queer narratives of
inner-city life. The “gay village,” “gay mecca,” “gai
Paris,” the “lesbian flaneur,” the “lesbian
bohème”—these and other urban phantasmagoria feature
paradoxically in this volume as figures of revolutionary utopia and
commodity spectacle, as fossilized archetypes of social
transformation and ruins of haunting cultural potential. Dianne
Chisholm introduces readers to new practices of walking, seeing,
citing, and remembering the city in works by Neil Bartlett, Samuel
R. Delany, Robert Glück, Alan Hollinghurst, Gary Indiana, Eileen
Myles, Sarah Schulman, Gail Scott, Edmund White, and David
Wojnarowicz. Reading these authors with reference to the history,
sociology, geography, and philosophy of space, particularly to the
everyday avant-garde production and practice of urban space,
Chisholm reveals how—and how effectively—queer narrative
documentary resembles and reassembles Walter Benjamin’s
constellations of Paris, “capital of the nineteenth century.”
Considering experimental queer writing in critical conjunction with
Benjamin’s city writing, the book shows how a queer perspective
on inner-city reality exposes contradictions otherwise obscured by
mythic narratives of progress. If Benjamin regards the Paris arcade
as a microcosm of high capitalism, wherein the (un)making of
industrial society is perceived retrospectively, in contemporary
queer narrative we see the sexually charged and commodity-entranced
space of the gay bathhouse as a microcosm of late capitalism and as
an exemplary site for excavating the contradictions of mass sex. In
Chisholm’s book we discover how, looking back on the ruins of
queer mecca, queer authors return to Benjamin to advance his
“dialectics of seeing”; how they cruise the paradoxes of market
capital, blasting a queer era out of the homogeneous course of
history.
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