‘Tragedy’ is one of those curiously elastic words reserved for life's saddest spheres and events, irrespective of the forms in which they appear. Even though a vast body of genre studies has emerged, however, only a handful of studies have drawn cross-historical comparisons between tragic forms. This essay demonstrates how Walter Benjamin’s reflections on Attic tragedy may contribute to such a line of thought, focusing both on tragedies’ subversive potential and on the social-historical constellations in which they first emerged. In the first part, Benjamin’s conception of the Attic tragedies is explored by focusing on his The Origin of German Tragic Drama and the theoretical roots of his earlier work. According to Benjamin, Attic tragedies...
The article investigates Walter Benjamin’s notion of allegory in The Origin of German Tragic Drama a...
In 1936, Walter Benjamin, fearful and frustrated with the traumatic residuals of the First World War...
In the early months of 1940, Walter Benjamin informed some of his correspondents in the United State...
The essay provides a hypothesis for the interpretation of the Origin of the German Mourning Play, wr...
Benjamin's writings have always been directed by the task of understanding the changes of modernity ...
The following discussion is intended as a critical intervention into recent debates about the “crisi...
In this article, the author offers a reading on Walter Benjamin�s The origin of German Tragic Drama ...
Cette thèse propose de repenser la tragédie en rapport à l'histoire. Son statut intermédiaire entre ...
This thesis offers a materialist account of dramatic genre. It shows how English revenge tragedies w...
Long considered to be an impenetrable, hermetic treatise, Walter Benjamin's The Origin of German Tra...
The Destructive Character presents radical and reactionary theories of the relations between literat...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence...
Walter Benjamin tried to get in touch with Panofsky and the Warburg’s circle, but the attempt failed...
The following paper examines Walter Benjamin’s reflection on the category of “redemption”, mainly de...
Before his untimely death in 1940, the German philosopher Walter Benjamin wrote an essay, entitled “...
The article investigates Walter Benjamin’s notion of allegory in The Origin of German Tragic Drama a...
In 1936, Walter Benjamin, fearful and frustrated with the traumatic residuals of the First World War...
In the early months of 1940, Walter Benjamin informed some of his correspondents in the United State...
The essay provides a hypothesis for the interpretation of the Origin of the German Mourning Play, wr...
Benjamin's writings have always been directed by the task of understanding the changes of modernity ...
The following discussion is intended as a critical intervention into recent debates about the “crisi...
In this article, the author offers a reading on Walter Benjamin�s The origin of German Tragic Drama ...
Cette thèse propose de repenser la tragédie en rapport à l'histoire. Son statut intermédiaire entre ...
This thesis offers a materialist account of dramatic genre. It shows how English revenge tragedies w...
Long considered to be an impenetrable, hermetic treatise, Walter Benjamin's The Origin of German Tra...
The Destructive Character presents radical and reactionary theories of the relations between literat...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence...
Walter Benjamin tried to get in touch with Panofsky and the Warburg’s circle, but the attempt failed...
The following paper examines Walter Benjamin’s reflection on the category of “redemption”, mainly de...
Before his untimely death in 1940, the German philosopher Walter Benjamin wrote an essay, entitled “...
The article investigates Walter Benjamin’s notion of allegory in The Origin of German Tragic Drama a...
In 1936, Walter Benjamin, fearful and frustrated with the traumatic residuals of the First World War...
In the early months of 1940, Walter Benjamin informed some of his correspondents in the United State...