Under the influence of Freud’s dream analysis, Benjamin writes down a dream about Goethe’s house, which he has visited before and in whose visitor’s book he finds his name ‘already entered in big, unruly, childish scrawl’ and at whose dinner table he finds places set for his relatives, ancestors and descendants. This leads him to exclaim: when the ‘house of our life…is under assault and enemy bombs are taking their toll, what enervated, perverse antiquities do they not lay bare in the foundations!’. Benjamin’s other homes, his exile homes, real and those imaged—such as the cave-like arcades—are considered in this essay as repositories of ‘perverse antiquities’ and spaces inhabited by ghosts not just the ghosts of Goethe, but of friends who ...
SFRH/BPD/95752/2013 UID/FIL/00183/2013This article analyses two photographic motives in Walter Be...
For Walter Benjamin, architecture is the clearest expression of the ‘latent mythology’ that underlie...
This paper addresses Walter Benjamin’s commentary on the poems of the cycle “Handbook for City-Dwell...
Under the influence of Freud’s dream analysis, Benjamin writes down a dream about Goethe’s house, wh...
This thesis is concerned with the role of memory and forgetting in the thought and writing of Theodo...
In a letter of 1932 to Gershom Scholem, Benjamin outlines his literary ambitions; he plans four majo...
Part 1: Walter Benjamin was a literary critic, essayist, translator, a collector of fine books and ...
The writings of Walter Benjamin include appropriations and transformations of modernist architectura...
Performances from Brass Art (Lewis, Mojsiewicz, Pettican), captured at the Freud Museum, London, usi...
This book explores Walter Benjamin, Siegfried Kracauer and Alexander Kluge's analyses of the role th...
“Brevity” epitomizes Walter Benjamin\u27s One-Way Street, an avant-garde text composed entirely of a...
In A Berlin Chronicle Walter Benjamin describes his autobiography as a space to be walked (indeed, i...
The Displacement of Ghosts is a practice-led research project interpreting stories of people and pla...
“Missing Homes” examines three nineteenth-century authors whose experiences of displacement from hom...
Through the structure of a haunted house, this thesis surveys horror literature from the late 1800s ...
SFRH/BPD/95752/2013 UID/FIL/00183/2013This article analyses two photographic motives in Walter Be...
For Walter Benjamin, architecture is the clearest expression of the ‘latent mythology’ that underlie...
This paper addresses Walter Benjamin’s commentary on the poems of the cycle “Handbook for City-Dwell...
Under the influence of Freud’s dream analysis, Benjamin writes down a dream about Goethe’s house, wh...
This thesis is concerned with the role of memory and forgetting in the thought and writing of Theodo...
In a letter of 1932 to Gershom Scholem, Benjamin outlines his literary ambitions; he plans four majo...
Part 1: Walter Benjamin was a literary critic, essayist, translator, a collector of fine books and ...
The writings of Walter Benjamin include appropriations and transformations of modernist architectura...
Performances from Brass Art (Lewis, Mojsiewicz, Pettican), captured at the Freud Museum, London, usi...
This book explores Walter Benjamin, Siegfried Kracauer and Alexander Kluge's analyses of the role th...
“Brevity” epitomizes Walter Benjamin\u27s One-Way Street, an avant-garde text composed entirely of a...
In A Berlin Chronicle Walter Benjamin describes his autobiography as a space to be walked (indeed, i...
The Displacement of Ghosts is a practice-led research project interpreting stories of people and pla...
“Missing Homes” examines three nineteenth-century authors whose experiences of displacement from hom...
Through the structure of a haunted house, this thesis surveys horror literature from the late 1800s ...
SFRH/BPD/95752/2013 UID/FIL/00183/2013This article analyses two photographic motives in Walter Be...
For Walter Benjamin, architecture is the clearest expression of the ‘latent mythology’ that underlie...
This paper addresses Walter Benjamin’s commentary on the poems of the cycle “Handbook for City-Dwell...