December 09, 2004

Walter Benjamin -- The Vollman of the Thirties?

The incomparable Robert Birnbaum talks with Francisco Goldman. Along the way, they mention Walter Benjamin. Now if you're like me and you encounter an author you haven't read three times in print or conversation during the course of a single week, you immediately take pains to add him to your bookpile. Benjamin's The Arcades Project, as referenced by Goldman, involved years of research and years of transformation and appears to be one of those hefty volumes that almost got away and didn't quite make it to its inevitable form. (The version which can be found today was recovered Kafka-style from a friend.) Composed of notes, lists, labryinthine references, quotes, and more, all of it taking on some momentous expression of consciousness, one suspects that Vollman got more than a few ideas from him. I'm straddling the fence on whether to get sucked into Benjamin. But he was the guy who came first.

Posted by DrMabuse at December 9, 2004 07:29 AM
Comments

I've only dipped into The Arcades Project, but it really seems worth spending some time with. Particularly if you have an interest in modernity, cities, or Paris.

Posted by: derik at December 9, 2004 09:10 AM

Barbara Hammer's film "Resisting Paradise" includes interviews with French citizens who aided Benjamin's attempted escape from the Nazis. He went over the Pyrenees to Spain, was refused refuge, and killed himself that night. The ms. he carefully carried with him disappeared and later resurfaced, as you said, as the Arcades Project.
http://pullquote.typepad.com/pullquote/2004/09/whammer_jammer_.html

Posted by: cinetrix at December 9, 2004 12:14 PM