Walter Benjamin
His life and work.
By Jessica Kraft
Walter Benjamin's life and work is difficult to categorize.
A Renaissance man of letters, he wrote on topics ranging from art history and
aesthetics to linguistics, politics, and psychedelic drugs. An ardent Marxist
and critical theorist, Benjamin also fused his understanding of Jewish
mysticism with historical materialism, prompting critic Terry Eagleton to call
him the "Marxist Rabbi." His close friends included superstars of the
Frankfurt School like Theodore Adorno and Max Horkheimer, as well as political
theorist Hannah Arendt and the great scholar of Jewish mysticism Gershom
Scholem.
Benjamin's chief contributions to twentieth century
intellectual history are likely his work on the aesthetic significance of image
reproduction (like photography) and the character of modern urban spaces, such
as the Parisian arcades, though he is also known as a consummate translator of
Proust and Baudelaire.
Benjamin's life has also provided a theoretical model for a
distinctly ambivalent stance on Jewish identity. Pushed out of Nazi Germany in
the 1930s, Benjamin became a Jewish expatriate in Paris until he was forced to
flee once again. In a tragic series of events, Benjamin narrowly missed
escaping to neutral Spain. He died near the Spanish border and became the
intellectual martyr of World War II.
Childhood Environment
Walter Benjamin was born in Berlin in 1892 to a liberal,
educated Jewish family. His father was a businessman who sometimes sold art at
auction, and encouraged Benjamin's intellectual pursuits by helping him collect
a vast philosophy library. As a boy, Benjamin watched his stately residential
neighborhood undergo rapid changes because of industrialization. Always a keen
observer of city life, he often referred to his early childhood memories of
Berlin in later writings and theories about the urban proletariat and social
injustice.
Benjamin's political activity germinated in Gustav Wyneken's
private school, which sought to create a youth movement devoted to the ideals
of Kant, Hegel, Goethe, and Nietzsche. In 1912, Benjamin began his
undergraduate education, which would take him to the universities of Freiberg,
Munich, and Berlin where he studied under the neo-Kantian philosopher Heinrich
Rickert, art historian Heinrich Wölfflin, and sociologist Georg Simmel.
Assimilation into a Hostile Society
When he was 23, Benjamin met the younger Gershom Scholem
through his youth movement activities. The young men engaged in intense
intellectual debate, talking late into the night about philosophy, poetry, and
the future of assimilated German Jews. This last topic was to occupy both men
throughout their scholarly careers as they took widely divergent paths.
Benjamin succinctly articulated the conflict in a letter to his friend Ludwig
Strauss in 1912:
"If we are indeed two-sided, Jewish and German, all our
energy has hitherto been directed towards affirming the German; the Jewish has
perhaps only been an exotic, southern (worse yet, sentimental) aroma in our
production and our lives. Nor will any individual, short of being an artist,
develop this quality equally within himself. But the way will be found."
Benjamin always maintained some distance from his fellow
Germans, and from the presumed German audience to which he addressed most of
his writing. He, like so many intellectually prominent German Jews of the time,
was stuck in the morass between anti-Semitism and modernity. This in-between
space did not allow him to retreat into traditional Judaism, nor did it allow
him to assimilate entirely into a hostile host society.
It should be noted that Benjamin had almost no formal Jewish
education, and never participated in Jewish religious institutions. But his
Jewishness was an abiding awareness of his cultural difference. His drive for
what he called "redemption" through his writing clearly had Jewish
messianic undertones.
Academics and Politics
Soon after completing his undergraduate education, Benjamin
married Dora Pollack. However, the marriage did not last. Benjamin soon moved
out of their shared apartment and turned his focus to his studies, completing a
doctorate in philosophy with a dissertation on "The Concept of Criticism
in German Romanticism" in 1920. But an academic career eluded him when
several professors at the University of Frankfurt deemed his work incomprehensible
and opaque. He was able to survive by writing freelance essays and articles for
journals and newspapers, but had to endure near-poverty living conditions.
While traveling in Italy in 1924, Walter met and fell in
love with the Latvian revolutionary Asja Lacis. It was in Italy that he started
developing his interest in Marxist and communist thought, moving away from his
youth movement anarchism and German idealism. While he didn't join the
Communist Party, he and Lacis traveled to Moscow to live and study for several
months.
In the 1930s, Benjamin developed his work on several topics.
He wrote about language theory, contemporary authors, translation, modern
liberalism, Goethe's novels, even children's books. His major essays question
how modern technology and the modernizing state affects everyday life and
cultural practice. He also frequently engaged left-wing theories of art and
culture, becoming a staunch critic of fascism.
Even after Scholem moved to Jerusalem to teach at Hebrew
University, Benjamin kept up their robust intellectual correspondence. The two
were at odds about the importance of religious and spiritual belief and spent
much time pitting rationality against spiritual faith. Benjamin always
maintained that his interest in kabbalistic texts and the history of Judaism
was purely academic and not religious.
The Arcades Project
In 1927, after he had moved to Paris, Benjamin wrote a very
short article entitled "Arcades" with his friend Franz Hessel which
was to become the project that Benjamin pursued until his death. What was
eventually published as The Arcades
Project was inspired by the architectural structure of the Parisian
"arcades," pedestrian passages through buildings that were lined with
small businesses. Over a period of 13 years, he compiled sundry lists and
observations about the streets, department stores, panoramas, exhibitions,
light fixtures, fashions and the particular social milieu of prostitutes,
gamblers and shoppers who frequented the arcades.
In 1934, when the Institute for Social Thought (the
Frankfurt School) began paying Benjamin for his research and writing, he
started to address political and economic aspects of the arcades, focusing on
issues of urban renewal, technological innovation, and economic injustice that
he witnessed. Published in English only in 1999, The Arcades Project was a 925-page compendium of his loosely
organized musings.
Of all of his other works, his essay "The Work of Art
in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction" (1936) was the most influential. Published
in the Institute of Social Research's journal of critical theory, it addressed
how the practice of copying art images changes both the value of the image and
its reception by the viewer. Benjamin's writing was also critical of the Third
Reich's use of reproduced images to promote obedience to the fascist regime.
Untimely End
Because of his anti-fascist advocacy, the Gestapo requested
Benjamin's expatriation from Paris in February 1939. When France declared war
on Germany, all Germans living in France were interned in camps. Benjamin was
sent to the village of Nevers in Burgundy, but was released due to
interventions by his friends. He continued to work, but in June 1940 he was
forced to flee Paris and left his manuscript of The Arcades Project in the care of then-librarian Georges Bataille
at the French National Library.
Just before Benjamin left Paris, Scholem urged him to come
to Palestine, but Benjamin believed that he would only be secure in the United
States. He then attempted to travel through neutral Spain by crossing the
Pyrenees on foot. On the night of September 26, 1940, he was falsely alarmed
when he was stopped by General Franco's border guards and must have assumed he
was going to be captured again. He was later found dead (probably from suicide)
in his hotel room, unaware that he was not under suspicion and could have
escaped to freedom.
Continued Influence
As the Frankfurt School theorists established their
intellectual presence in the US after the war, Benjamin's writings continued to
have a profound influence on social thought and cultural criticism.
His tragically short life also became the subject of Jay
Parini's novel Benjamin's Crossing.
Charles Bernstein and Brian Ferneyhough wrote the opera "Shadowtime"
based on Benjamin's life, and Susan Sontag used his character as inspiration
for her story, "Under the Sign of Saturn". His lengthy and highly
erudite correspondence with Scholem was published in The Correspondence of Walter Benjamin and Gershom Scholem, 1932-1940.
Jessica C. Kraft
writes about art, design, and culture for several publications in the United
States and the UK.