The Destructive Character presents radical and reactionary theories of the relations between literature and mass culture, and then the interpenetration of literary and musical voices since the rise of the phonograph in Engl and . Walter Benjamin's position refuses elitism like that of Theodor Adorno and T. S. Eliot: the technological basis of modern mass culture holds the potential to produce "shock-effects" that expose domination in social relations. Benjamin emphasizes, much more consistently than previous commentators suggest, an iconoclastic, "destructive" attitude towards conventional distinction and separation of "mass" and "high" cultural levels. Brecht, Barthes, and recent pop music analysts argue, like Benjamin, that the writer and...