My contribution to the the NTS issue on Theatre and Continental Philosophy discusses a particular aspect of the complex intellectual and creative dialogue between the work and thinking of Walter Benjamin and Bertolt Brecht, beginning in 1929, the year they became close friends. Benjamin is no doubt the first critic of Brecht’s epic theatre, even planning to write a book about his artistic contributions. By examining the notion of the “Interruption” (Die Unterbrechung) and the sudden appearance of a stranger in three of Benjamin’s texts about Brecht’s epic theatre, I want to draw attention to Benjamin’s philosophical understanding of this ‘critical’ figure’ (the interrupting stranger), as one of the central aspects of the epic theatre. The e...
As one of the most influential figures in theatre, Bertolt Brecht has stamped his legacy in the wor...
This paper addresses Walter Benjamin’s commentary on the poems of the cycle “Handbook for City-Dwell...
Oscar Guardiola-Rivera’s essay “Theatrum Philosophicum: Thinking Literature and Politics with Walter...
My contribution to the the NTS issue on Theatre and Continental Philosophy discusses a particular as...
“Shock” is perhaps the central concept of modernist aesthetics and Walter Benjamin its best known th...
This essay is presented as a Benjaminian work site. The juxtaposition of apparently distant figures ...
This article is the result of a master's research carried out in the framework of studies on psychoa...
Preparing my presentation on Brecht, filled me up with excitement about an approach to theatre that ...
Bertold Brecht’s references to William Hogarth are not very numerous; moreover, much was disseminate...
This special issue dedicated to Wlater Benjamin collects five essays in which a fundamental feature ...
Walter Benjamin had an assiduous relationship with Bertolt Brecht, especially during the latter’s ex...
“Shock” is perhaps the central concept of modernist aesthetics and Walter Benjamin its best known th...
An interpretation of Bertold Brecht, Don\u27t write that you admire me! Write that I was an uncomfo...
The popularity of John Gay’s political satire play The Beggar’s Opera in the English literary world ...
As one of the most influential figures in theatre, Bertolt Brecht has stamped his legacy in the wor...
As one of the most influential figures in theatre, Bertolt Brecht has stamped his legacy in the wor...
This paper addresses Walter Benjamin’s commentary on the poems of the cycle “Handbook for City-Dwell...
Oscar Guardiola-Rivera’s essay “Theatrum Philosophicum: Thinking Literature and Politics with Walter...
My contribution to the the NTS issue on Theatre and Continental Philosophy discusses a particular as...
“Shock” is perhaps the central concept of modernist aesthetics and Walter Benjamin its best known th...
This essay is presented as a Benjaminian work site. The juxtaposition of apparently distant figures ...
This article is the result of a master's research carried out in the framework of studies on psychoa...
Preparing my presentation on Brecht, filled me up with excitement about an approach to theatre that ...
Bertold Brecht’s references to William Hogarth are not very numerous; moreover, much was disseminate...
This special issue dedicated to Wlater Benjamin collects five essays in which a fundamental feature ...
Walter Benjamin had an assiduous relationship with Bertolt Brecht, especially during the latter’s ex...
“Shock” is perhaps the central concept of modernist aesthetics and Walter Benjamin its best known th...
An interpretation of Bertold Brecht, Don\u27t write that you admire me! Write that I was an uncomfo...
The popularity of John Gay’s political satire play The Beggar’s Opera in the English literary world ...
As one of the most influential figures in theatre, Bertolt Brecht has stamped his legacy in the wor...
As one of the most influential figures in theatre, Bertolt Brecht has stamped his legacy in the wor...
This paper addresses Walter Benjamin’s commentary on the poems of the cycle “Handbook for City-Dwell...
Oscar Guardiola-Rivera’s essay “Theatrum Philosophicum: Thinking Literature and Politics with Walter...