Difference between revisions of "Walter Benjamin"

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** ''[[Media:Benjamin_Walter_One-Way_Street_and_Other_Writings.pdf|One-Way Street and Other Writings]]'', London: NLB, 1979.  
 
** ''[[Media:Benjamin_Walter_One-Way_Street_and_Other_Writings.pdf|One-Way Street and Other Writings]]'', London: NLB, 1979.  
 
** ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=7652 Early Writings, 1910-1917]'', Cambridge/MA and London: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2011.
 
** ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=7652 Early Writings, 1910-1917]'', Cambridge/MA and London: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2011.
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* [[Media:Walter-benjamin-obras-escolhidas-1.pdf|''Obras escolhidas: Magia e tecnica, arte e politica. Ensaios sobre literatura e historia da cultura'']], vol. 1, Editora Brasiliense S.A., Sao Paulo, 1978 (Portughese)
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* [[Media:Walter-benjamin-obras-escolhidas-2.pdf|''Obras escolhidas: Rua de mao unica'']], vol. 2, Editora Brasiliense S.A., Sao Paulo, 1978 (Portughese)
 
* ''[[Media:Benjamin_Walter_Eseji.pdf|Eseji]]'', trans. Milan Tabaković, Belgrade: Nolit, 1974, 324 pp. (Serbo-Croatian)
 
* ''[[Media:Benjamin_Walter_Eseji.pdf|Eseji]]'', trans. Milan Tabaković, Belgrade: Nolit, 1974, 324 pp. (Serbo-Croatian)
 
* [http://monoskop.org/log/?p=7021 ''Gesammelte Schriften, Bd 5: Das Passagen-Werk''], Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp Verlag, 1982. (German)  
 
* [http://monoskop.org/log/?p=7021 ''Gesammelte Schriften, Bd 5: Das Passagen-Werk''], Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp Verlag, 1982. (German)  

Revision as of 10:17, 10 January 2014


Passport photograph of Walter Benjamin, Berlin, 1928
Born July 15, 1892(1892-07-15)
Berlin, German Empire
Died September 26, 1940(1940-09-26) (aged 48)
Portbou, Catalonia, Spain

Walter Bendix Schönflies Benjamin was a literary critic, philosopher, social critic, translator, radio broadcaster and essayist. Combining elements of German idealism or Romanticism, historical materialism and Jewish mysticism, Benjamin made enduring and influential contributions to aesthetic theory and Western Marxism, and is associated with the Frankfurt School.

Life and work

This section is sourced from Marianne Franklin's article on Walter Benjamin (2003), pp 14-16.

Walter Benjamin (1892–1940) was born in Berlin, Germany, into a ‘wealthy run-of-the-mill assimilated Jewish family’. He was raised in a welloff quarter of the city and came of age during the Weimar Republic years before eventually settling in Paris in the 1930s. The historical record is patchy but apparently he earned his living, supported a wife and family until his divorce in 1930 and a passion for book collecting, from a combination of journal and newspaper publications, a stipend from the Frankfurt School, and by other ‘private means’, most likely his father, who was an art dealer and antiquarian.

The longevity and extent of Walter Benjamin’s posthumous fame and influence is in inverse proportion to the relative brevity of his life, and the even shorter time-span of his academic and publishing output. His publishing career spanned but a decade. His early academic record was chequered, to say the least, in that a mixture of ‘bungling and bad luck’ dogged the reception of his work effectively preventing him from establishing a university career. His two main pieces of scholarly research were published in 1920 and 1928, both of which were famously misunderstood at the time. It was only fifteen years after his death, with the publication of his collected work through the joint effort of Theodor Adorno and others, that his influence began to spread.

Perhaps the best known biographical detail of Benjamin’s life is how it ended, with suicide at the age of 48 on the Franco-Spanish border in September of 1940. He was uneasily awaiting a visa that would allow him to emigrate to the United States of America, after fleeing to France from Nazi persecution. In Arendt’s account, ‘the immediate occasion for Benjamin’s suicide was an uncommon stroke of bad luck’. Apparently, he mistakenly believed that he would not be able to obtain the necessary papers after being stopped at the Spanish border. Expecting to be sent back to Nazi Germany, he chose to kill himself instead. The historical and intellectural resonances of this personal choice have not gone unacknowledged by later commentators.

A crucial aspect to Walter Benjamin’s intellectual legacy is his role as co-founder of ‘Critical Theory’, the body of Marxist and Freudian influenced theory and research based at the University of Frankfurt. His close – albeit stormy – intellectual relationship with Adorno and Horkheimer, the doyens of the Frankfurt School, is an important theme in the literature. Benjamin, who ‘was no-one’s disciple’, was ‘probably the most peculiar Marxist ever produced by this movement, which God knows had its full share of oddities’; was involved in the European Communist movement – he visited the Soviet Union – and Zionist activism at the same time; dreamt of publishing a work made up entirely of quotations in a pre-postmodern age; contributed to aesthetic and architectural theory and philosophy of history; was an accomplished translator; wrote (famously) about Goethe, Proust, Baudelaire and Kafka, book collecting, wandering about the city, and technological change. This eclecticism is reflected in the vast quantity of secondary literature on his life and work. The main thing to remember for the interested reader is that caveats and arguments – about ideological affiliation, methodology, political applicability – abound when it comes to this thinker.

See also

Literature

Benjamin's collected writings

Articles by Benjamin

Private correspondence

Books on Benjamin

Journal issues on Benjamin

Articles on Benjamin

External links