WALTER BENJAMIN


'Walter Bendix Schönflies Benjamin' (July 15, 1892September 27, 1940) was a German Marxist literary critic, essayist, translator, and philosopher. He was at times associated with the Frankfurt School of critical theory and was also greatly inspired by the Marxism of Bertolt Brecht and Jewish mysticism as presented by Gershom Scholem.
As a sociological and cultural critic, Benjamin combined ideas of historical materialism, German idealism, and Jewish mysticism in a body of work which was an entirely novel contribution to western philosophy, Marxism, and aesthetic theory. As a literary scholar, he translated Charles Baudelaire's ''Tableaux Parisiens'' and Marcel Proust's famous novel, ''In Search of Lost Time''. His work is widely cited in academic and literary studies, in particular his essays ''The Task of the Translator'' and ''The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction''.

Contents
Biography
Works
''The Origin of German Tragic Drama''
The Arcades Project
Benjamin's style
Death
Legacy
Bibliography
Primary literature
Secondary literature
Notes
External links

Biography


'Walter Benedix Schönflies Benjamin' was born in Berlin on July 15, 1892 into a wealthy Jewish family (his father was a banker and later antique trader). He was the eldest of three children of Emil Benjamin and Pauline Schönflies Benjamin. In 1902 Benjamin was enrolled at ''Kaiser Friedrich Schule'', in Berlin Charlottenburg. After three years at this school he was sent by his parents to a country boarding school in Thuringia. In 1907 Benjamin returned to Berlin and to the ''Kaiser Friedrich Gymnasium''.
In 1912 he enrolled at Albert Ludwigs University in Freiburg im Breisgau, but at the end of the summer semester again returned to Berlin and enrolled at Friedrich Wilhelm University to continue his studies of philosophy. Benjamin became president of the ''Freie Studentenschaft'', and began to write essays arguing for the necessity of educational and general cultural change (cf., "Experience," 1913). Failing to win re-election to the presidency, Benjamin again took up studies in Freiburg, attending the lectures of Heinrich Rickert. After visits to Paris and Italy, he returned to Berlin.
In 1914 he began translating Charles Baudelaire. The following year he moved to Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich where he met Rainer Maria Rilke and Gershom Scholem. His lifetime friendship with Scholem was due not only to the fact they were both Jewish but also to their shared interest in art. The same year Benjamin wrote a paper on Friedrich Hölderlin.
In 1917 he married Dora Kellner (1890-1964) and moved to the University of Bern (where he first met Ernst Bloch), and the following year they had a son, Stefan Rafael (1918-1972). In 1919 Benjamin earned his Ph.D. cum laude with the essay ''The Concept of Criticism in German Romanticism''. They returned to Berlin, to live with Benjamin's parents, because of financial problems. Walter Benjamin and Dora Kellner separated in 1921, and the next year he moved to the University of Heidelberg where he tried an academic career.
The Institute for Social Research (Frankfurt School) was founded in 1923. Benjamin met Theodor Adorno and became a friend of Georg Lukács (whose ''The Theory of the Novel'', published in 1920, strongly influenced him). The economic crisis in Germany caused his father to have serious difficulties in continuing the financial support he gave to Benjamin. At the end of 1923 his best friend, Gershom Scholem, emigrated to Palestine (which had been occupied by the British Army in 1918). The following years Scholem tried to persuade Benjamin to join him.
In 1924 his paper "Goethe's Elective Affinities" was published by Hugo von Hoffmansthal in the magazine ''Neue Deutsche Beiträge''. Together with Ernst Bloch, Benjamin spent several months in the Italian island of Capri, writing his ''Habilitationsschrift'', ''The Origin of German Tragic Drama''. There he first met Asja Lacis (1891-1979), a Bolshevik Latvian actress living in Moscow. She would remain an important and lasting intellectual and erotic influence on him.
In 1925 ''The Origin of German Tragic Drama'' was finally rejected by the Frankfurt University, effectively closing the door to an academic career for the 33 year old scholar. Together with Franz Hessel (1880-1941), he translated the first volumes of ''In Search of Lost Time'', by Marcel Proust. The next year Benjamin began to write for the ''Frankurter Zeitung'' and ''Die Literarische Welt'', so he could afford living several months in Paris. His father died in 1926 and, in December, Benjamin travelled to Moscow to meet Asja Lacis, but found her sick in a sanatorium.
In 1927 Benjamin started his monumental and unfinished ''The Arcades Project'', working on it until his death. The same year he met Gershom Scholem a last time in Berlin, and considered moving to Palestine. In 1928 Benjamin published ''One-Way Street'' and ''The Origin of German Tragic Drama''. In 1929, he was introduced to Bertold Brecht by Asja Lacis, then Brecht's assistant, in Berlin.
Benjamin divorced only in 1930. With the emergent Nazi Party and growing activity of the SA, in 1932 he spent several months on the Spanish island of Ibiza. Benjamin moved to Nice, where he planned to commit suicide. With the attack on the Reichstag in 1933, and the increasing persecution of the Jews, Benjamin sought shelter in Svendborg, at Bertold Brecht's, and Sanremo, where his ex-wife lived, before moving to Paris.
His financial situation got worse. Benjamin collaborated with Max Horkheimer and received some funds from the Institute for Social Research, which had relocated to New York. He met other German intellectual and artist refugees in Paris and became friend of Hannah Arendt, Hermann Hesse and Kurt Weil. In 1936 ''The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction'' was first published in French by Max Horkheimer, in the Institute for Social Research’s ''Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung''.
In 1937 Benjamin worked on his book ''The Paris of the Second Empire in Baudelaire'', met Georges Bataille, and joined the College of Sociology. In 1938 he paid a last visit to Bertold Brecht in Denmark. Hitler removed the German citizenship from Jews and Benjamin was incarcerated for three months in a camp near Nevers.
In January 1940 Benjamin returned to Paris and wrote his ''Theses on the Philosophy of History''. In June, the ''Wehrmacht'' broke the French defense. Benjamin flew to Lourdes with his sister, one day before the Germans entered Paris. In August, he obtained a visa to the United States, negotiated by Max Horkheimer. Attempting to elude the Gestapo, his attempt to reach Portugal (officially a neutral country) through Spain failed. Benjamin apparently took his own life on September 27, 1940 at Portbou, a border town in the Pyrenees, Catalonia, swallowing an overdose of morphine compound after the group of Jewish refugees he joined was intercepted by the Spanish Police.[1]

Works


Among Benjamin's most important works were the following:

★ ''Zur Kritik der Gewalt'' (Critique of Violence / 1921).

★ ''Goethes Wahlverwandtschaften'' (Goethe's Elective Affinities / 1922).

★ ''Ursprung des deutschen Trauerspiels'' (Origin of German Tragic Drama [Mourning Play] / 1928).

★ ''Einbahnstraße'' (One Way Street / 1928).

★ ''Das Kunstwerk im Zeitalter seiner technischen Reproduzierbarkeit'' (The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction / 1936).

★ ''Berliner Kindheit um 1900'' (Berlin Childhood around 1900 / 1950, published posthumously).

★ ''Über den Begriff der Geschichte'' (On the Concept of History / Theses on the Philosophy of History) / 1939, published posthumously).

★ ''Das Paris des Second Empire bei Baudelaire'' (The Paris of the Second Empire in Baudelaire / 1938).
Benjamin corresponded extensively with Theodor Adorno and Bertolt Brecht and occasionally received funding from the Frankfurt School under Adorno's and Horkheimer's direction, even after this had moved to New York City. The competing influences of Brecht's Marxism (and secondarily Adorno's critical theory) and the Jewish mysticism of his friend Gerschom Scholem were central to Benjamin's work, though he never completely resolved their differences. On the other hand, some later critics, such as Paul de Man, have argued that Benjamin's writings dynamically flow between these different traditions in order to create a kind of internal critique out of their juxtaposition. "On the Concept of History" (often referred to as the "Theses on the Philosophy of History"), among Benjamin's last works, is, according to some readers , the closest approach to such a synthesis.
''Angelus Novus'', by Paul Klee (1920). Benjamin saw in it the "Angel of History".

In the ninth thesis of the essay "Theses on the Philosophy of History" Benjamin, inspired by a Paul Klee painting called ''Angelus Novus'' in his possession, poetically describes the course of human history as a path of accumulating destruction which "the angel" views with horror but from which he cannot turn away. His "Angel of History" would later inspire Tony Kushner's angels in his work Angels in America. Benjamin focused on epistemology, theory of language, allegory, and the philosophy of history. Furthermore, he wrote essays on Baudelaire, Kafka, Proust and Brecht.
''The Origin of German Tragic Drama''

Benjamin's most lengthy completed work is his ''Habilitation'' dissertation, the ''Ursprung des deutschen Trauerspiels'' (translated as ''The Origin of German Tragic Drama'' by John Osborne). In this study, at once forbiddingly theoretical and painstakingly empirical, Benjamin analyses Reformation-era German politics and culture through the ''Trauerspiel'' genre of the 16th-17th century.
The project begins with a lengthy "Epistemo-Critical Prologue" in which Benjamin sets out the philosophical stakes of his work: the combination and elaboration of parts of the Platonic theory of ideas, the Hegelian historical sublation, and the Leibnizian monad. Encapsulating the one within the other, Benjamin gives the Platonic form a historical instantiation, but only in the sense that it is monadic. Within aesthetic objects of study, there is contained the monad of its historical development, and when this monad is placed within a constellation of other objects, it reveals to the scholar the historical development of the idea. Thus, in the ''Trauerspiel'' itself, what appears to be an ahistorical accumulation of fragments is instead already in some sense historical.
Within the main text itself, there are two main divisions: first, a distinction between tragedy and ''Trauerspiel'', where Benjamin clears away the interpretations that precede his work, and second, a lengthy discussion of the relation of allegory to symbolism and the way in which allegory might open onto his modified platonic notion of the idea. In the first section, Benjamin notes that tragedy and ''Trauerspiel'' differ in their conception of time: the tragedy is eschatological insofar as its plot leads to a defined end-point, where characters and stories reach a fatalistic resolution; whereas the ''Trauerspiel'' takes place only in space, time stretches out forever towards the promised but undisclosed Last Judgment, so characters are therefore paralysed from all action and can only wait—thus there is no resolution and no sense of time passing. In short, in ''Trauerspiel'', time is spatialized. Part of what makes ''Trauerspielen'' so inscrutable is that their relationship to history is only ever allegorical, in the sense that the play presents fragments and broken shards of history without narrativizing them, as we are accustomed to seeing in most plays. These fragments, when placed on the stage, rather than maintaining a denotative relationship to history, where history is told, the spatial constellation of these fragments reveals a true idea of history. Benjamin's book constantly performs this constellating of monads, presaging in dependent clauses what will be said more fully later, itself constantly reaching back to earlier sections of the book. Benjamin's project, then, is most famously summed up very early in the book, writing, "the baroque knows no eschatology and for that very reason it has no mechanism by which it gathers all earthly things in together and exalts them before consigning them to their end" (p. 66).
In a changing political climate, Benjamin hoped that this book would relate to the German belief in political and historical progress by showing the absolute futility of raw historicism, just as in the ''Trauerspiel'' the resuccitation of historical objects and facts is absolutely impossible. Instead, the massive complexity and profound obscurity of the book meant that it fell on largely deaf ears. When submitted as a Habilitation thesis (a higher degree in the German academic system that, after a PhD, gives legal authority to teach in a university), Professor Schultz of Frankfurt University found it inappropriate for his own department of "Germanistik" (the department of German Language and Literature), and passed it off to the department of aesthetics (philosophy of art). The readers in that department called it an "incomprehensible morass" and the university recommended that Benjamin withdraw the thesis in order to avoid the embarrassment of a public rejection. After some consideration, Benjamin did so.
The Arcades Project

Main articles: Arcades Project

Benjamin's final, unfinished work, known as the ''Passagenwerk'' or ''Arcades Project'', was to be an enormous collection of writings on the city life of Paris in the 19th century, especially concerned with the roofed outdoor "arcades" which created the city's distinctive street life and culture of ''flânerie''. It has been posthumously edited and published in its unfinished form.
Benjamin's style

Susan Sontag once remarked that, in Benjamin's texts, sentences do not seem to generate in the ordinary way; they do not lead gently into one another, and do not create an obvious line of reasoning. Instead, it is as if each sentence "had to say everything, before the inward gaze of total concentration dissolved the subject before his eyes", a style of writing and thinking Sontag calls "freeze-frame baroque." Sontag writes that "his major essays seem to end just in time, before they self-destruct."[2] Though Sontag didn't have a full overview of the ''Arcades Project'' when she wrote this, her comments apply to that work as well. The difficulty of Benjamin's style can be understood as an essential part of his philosophical project. Fascinated by notions of reference and constellation, Benjamin's goal in much of his later work was less to articulate a coherent position than to use varied intertexts to reveal aspects of the past that cannot and should not be understood within larger, monolithic constructs of historical understanding (the so-called "grand narrative").
Through his writings Benjamin identifies himself as a modernist for whom the philosophical merges with the literary: logic-based philosophical reasoning cannot account for all experience, and especially not for self-representation through artistic mediums.
His concerns regarding style are exemplified in his essay ''The Task of the Translator'', in which he argues that any literary translation, by definition, produces deformations and misunderstandings of the original text. In the deformed text, otherwise hidden aspects of the original are elucidated, while formerly obvious aspects become unreadable. Benjamin considers this mortification of the text productive; when placed in a specific constellation of works and ideas, newly revealed affinities between historical objects appear and are productive of philosophical truth.

Death


Walter Benjamin's grave in Portbou

Benjamin probably committed suicide in Portbou at the Spanish-French border, attempting to escape from the Nazis. The circumstances of his death are unclear. He appeared to be ill when he arrived in Portbou, having crossed a wild part of the Pyrenees in refugee fashion, and the party he was with were told they would be denied passage across the border, which would have been a step towards freedom (Benjamin's ultimate goal was the United States). While staying in the ''Hotel de Francia'' he took some morphine pills and he died in the night of 27/28 September 1940. The fact that he was buried in the consecrated section of a Roman Catholic cemetery would indicate that it was not announced as a suicide. The other persons in his party were allowed passage the next day, and safely reached Lisbon on 30 September. A manuscript copy of Benjamin's "On the Concept of History" was passed to Adorno by Hannah Arendt, who crossed the French-Spanish border at Portbou a few months later, and was subsequently published by the Institute for Social Research (temporarily relocated in New York) in 1942.
One way of interpreting these facts is that though the entire group of travellers was stopped, Benjamin was in fact the main target. As an emigrant Jew, a radical writer who had made close friends with Brecht and Adorno, and a fierce critic of Nazism he would have been well-known to the Gestapo and it is a well documented fact that the Spanish border police were cooperative with the Germans. Once he was dead, following this interpretation, there would be no point in holding back the others (who did not know Benjamin). Benjamin certainly was aware that he was risking his life both if he went south or if he stayed behind in Paris; the latter meant certain death and probably torture at the hands of the Gestapo. It does not seem that he was using any forged identity papers when attempting to cross into Spain, and this would make it easier for the border police to identify him. In all probability Benjamin did not know people who were in the more advanced escape business, and his portliness and distinctive face made it hard for him to disguise himself anyway.
A completed manuscript which Benjamin had carried in his suitcase disappeared after his death and has not been recovered. Some critics speculate that it was his ''Arcades Project'' in a final form; this is very unlikely as the author's plans for the work had changed in the wake of Adorno's criticisms in 1938, and it seems clear that the work was flowing over its containing limits in his last years. As the last finished piece of work we have from Benjamin, the ''Theses on the Philosophy of History'' (noted above) is often cited; Adorno claimed this had been written in the spring of 1940, weeks before the Germans invaded France. While this is not completely certain, it is clearly one of his last works, and the final paragraph, about the Jewish quest for the Messiah provides a harrowing final point to Benjamin's work, with its themes of culture, destruction, Jewish heritage and the fight between humanity and nihilism. He brings up the interdiction, in some varieties of Judaism, to try to determine the year when the Messiah would come into the world, and points out that this did not make Jews indifferent to the future "for every second of time was the strait gate through which the Messiah might enter."
An alternative theory of his death considers the possibility that Benjamin was actually murdered by Stalinist agents. He might have earned his place on Stalin's hitlist by the fact that his last book ''Theses on the Philosophy of History'' has been read as an analysis of the failures of Stalinism. The lost manuscript could well have been an elaboration of his criticism of Stalinism and its loss not so much an accident as the very cause for the murder.[3]

Legacy


Since the appearance of his ''Schriften'' in 1955, 15 years after his death, Benjamin's work has been the subject of numerous books and essays.

Bibliography


Primary literature


★ ''The Arcades Project''. ISBN 0-674-00802-2

★ ''Berlin Childhood Around 1900''. ISBN 0-674-02222-X

★ ''Charles Baudelaire: A Lyric Poet In The Era Of High Capitalism''. ISBN 0-902308-94-7

★ ''The Correspondence of Walter Benjamin, 1910–1940''. ISBN 0-226-04237-5

★ ''The Correspondence of Walter Benjamin and Gershom Scholem''. ISBN 0-674-17415-1

★ ''Illuminations''. ISBN 0-8052-0241-2

★ ''Moscow Diary''. ISBN 0-674-58744-8

★ ''One Way Street and Other Writings''. ISBN 0-86091-836-X

★ ''Reflections''. ISBN 0-8052-0802-X

★ ''On Hashish''. ISBN 0-674-02221-1

★ ''The Origin of German Tragic Drama''. ISBN 0-86091-837-8

★ ''Understanding Brecht''. ISBN 0-902308-99-8

★ ''Selected Writings'' in four volumes, Harvard University Press. Volume 1, ISBN 0-674-94585-9. Volume 2, ISBN 0-674-94586-7. Volume 3, ISBN 0-674-00896-0. Volume 4, ISBN 0-674-01076-0.
Secondary literature


Benjamin, Andrew & Peter Osborne (eds.), ''Walter Benjamin's Philosophy: Destruction and Experience'' (New York & London: Routledge, 1993). ISBN 0415083680 (hardcover); ISBN 0415083699 (paperback)

Derrida, Jacques, "Force of Law: The 'Mystical Foundation of Authority'," in Gil Anidjar (ed.), ''Acts of Religion'' (New York & London: Routledge, 2002). ISBN 0415924014

★ Ferris, David S. (ed.), ''Walter Benjamin: Theoretical Questions'' (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1996). ISBN 0804725691 (hardcover); ISBN 0804725705 (paperback)

★ Jennings, Michael, ''Dialectical Images: Walter Benjamin's Theory of Literary Criticism''. ISBN 0-8014-2006-7

★ Leslie, Esther, ''Walter Benjamin, Overpowering Conformism'' (London: Pluto Press, 2001). ISBN 0-7453-1568-2

★ McMurtry, Larry, ''Walter Benjamin at the Dairy Queen: Reflections at Sixty and Beyond''. ISBN 0-684-85496-1

★ Missac, Pierre, ''Walter Benjamin's Passages'' (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1995). ISBN 0262133059 (hardcover); ISBN 026263175X (paperback)

★ Steinberg, Michael P. (ed.), ''Walter Benjamin and the Demands of History'' (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1996). ISBN 0-8014-3135-2 (hardcover); ISBN 0-8014-8257-7 (paperback)

★ Witte, Bernd, ''Walter Benjamin: An Intellectual Biography''. ISBN 0-8143-2017-1

Notes


1. Jay, Martin ''The Dialectical Imagination: A History of the Frankfurt School and the Institute of Social Research 1923–1950''.
2. Susan Sontag, ''Under the Sign of Saturn,'' p. 129.
3. Did Stalin's killers liquidate Walter Benjamin?

External links



Walter Benjamin Research Syndicate

Benjamin: On the Concept of History

The Internationale Walter Benjamin Gesellschaft. ''In English and German.''

★ ''Who Killed Walter Benjamin?'', a documentary film about the circumstances of Benjamin's death

★ ''ShadowTime'', an opera on the life of Walter Benjamin, music by Brian Ferneyhough, libretto by Charles Bernstein.

Trilectic- The Lives of Walter Benjamin and Asja Lacis set to music.

The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction

The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction (Complete Version)

★ ''Head Rush: How drug experiments illuminated Walter Benjamin's thinking'', Michael Berk, nextbook, May 16, 2006

The Arcades Project Project or The Rhetoric of Hypertext

Fragments of the Passagenwerk: The Arcades Project, Giles Peaker

Paris, capitale du XIXe siècle In French

The Dialectics of Allegoresis: Historical Materialism in Benjamin's ''Illuminations'', John Parker

Walter Benjamin, "On Hashish" trans. Scott J. Thompson (1996) [Walter Benjamin Research Syndicate]

Scott J. Thompson, "From Rausch to Rebellion: Walter Benjamin's ON HASHISH"[Walter Benjamin Research Syndicate]

Through the Trapdoor: review of ''The Narrow Foothold'' by Carina Birman describes Benjamin's final days

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