Gerhard Richter examines, in the work of Walter Benjamin, one of the central problems of modernity: the question of how to receive an intellectual inheritance. Covering aspects of Benjamin's complex relationship to the legacies of such writers as Kant, Nietzsche, Kafka, Heidegger, and Derrida, each chapter attends to a key concern in Benjamin's writing, while reflecting on the challenges that this issue presents for the question of inheritability and transmissibility. Both reading Benjamin and watching himself reading Benjamin, Richter participates in the act of inheriting while also inquiring into the conditions of possibility for inheriting Benjamin's corpus today.
Gerhard Richter examines, in the work of Walter Benjamin, one of the central problems of modernity: the question of how to receive an intellectual inheritance. Covering aspects of Benjamin's complex relationship to the legacies of such writers as Kant, Nietzsche, Kafka, Heidegger, and Derrida, each chapter attends to a key concern in Benjamin's writing, while reflecting on the challenges that this issue presents for the question of inheritability and transmissibility. Both reading Benjamin and watching himself reading Benjamin, Richter participates in the act of inheriting while also inquiring into the conditions of possibility for inheriting Benjamin's corpus today.
Acknowledgments 1. Inheriting Benjamin Otherwise 2. Erbsünde: A Note on Paradoxical Inheritance in Benjamin’s Kafka Essay 3. Benjamin’s Blotting Paper: Writing and Erasing a Theological Figure of Thought 4. Critique and the Thing: Benjamin and Heidegger 5. The Work of Art and Its Formal and Genealogical Determinations: Benjamin’s “Cool Place” between Kant and Nietzsche 6. Going with Time: A Miniature on Time and Photography after Benjamin Bibliography Index
Gerhard Richter, a leading critical theorist and Benjamin scholar, examines one of the central questions of modernity: the question of how to receive an intellectual inheritance, in relation to the work of Walter Benjamin.
Gerhard Richter is Professor of German Studies and Comparative Literature and Chair of the German Studies Department at Brown University, USA. He is the author of five previous books in critical theory, including Afterness: Figures of Following in Modern Thought and Aesthetics (2011).
Engaging and lucidly written, Inheriting Walter Benjamin offers new
insights into some of Benjamin’s most important theoretical
concerns. From inheritance to critique, from the work of art to the
critical, dangerous moment of reading, Richter’s rhetorical close
readings of key passages are one of the great strengths of this
work.
*MLN*
Perhaps the greatest contribution of this new book to Benjamin
studies is the discovery that Benjamin’s reflections on the
question of inheritance traverse his entire corpus and that
“inheritance” may function as a key concept.
*German Studies Review*
Gerhard Richter brings meaning to the event of inheritance, which
affects us in every walk--and failure--of life. The work explores
with exquisite integrity what has motivated or tripped us as we are
traversed by the experience that Benjamin names and crucially
disarticulates. The extent to which Benjamin's text remote controls
modern trials of transmissibility and consciousness remains briskly
active. Beautifully written, with punch and poignancy, Richter's
work commands the authority of the great doubter and accomplished
scholar as it constitutes Benjamin's legacy, supplying pleasure and
stirring insight to the complex themes, obsessions, and
bewilderment of our era.
*Avital Ronell, University Professor in the Humanities, New York
University, USA*
With his carefully elaborated notion of literary and cultural
inheritance, Gerhard Richter lends rare coherence both to
Benjamin's critical task and to the elective affinities that he
shared with such crucial contemporaries as Martin Heidegger. In its
dynamic fluidity, this study accommodates exciting tangents,
including a new take on Benjamin's gravitation to photography as
icon and catalyst of modernization. Engagingly written, rigorous,
and well-documented, this book comprises a rich new resource.
*Henry Sussman, Visiting Professor of Germanic Languages and
Literatures, Yale University, USA*
This is a fascinating and challenging book. Richter’s subtle
readings demonstrate the theological, political, philosophical, and
aesthetic complexity - and contemporary urgency - of Benjamin’s
concept of inheritance.
*Rebecca Comay, Professor of Philosophy and Comparative Literature,
University of Toronto, Canada*
Gerhard Richter is one of a tiny handful of the most important
readers of Walter Benjamin. Inheriting Walter Benjamin will not
only enhance that reputation; it also shows Richter as a brilliant
scholar of an astonishing range of texts and objects ranging from
Kant through contemporary photography. This book is a must read for
anyone interested in Benjamin—and in innovative and highly
suggestive readings of him.
*Michael W. Jennings, Class of 1900 Professor of Modern Languages,
Princeton University, USA*
“… Richter’s volume is a remarkable achievement, representing a
renewal of non-hermeneutic but text-centered reading practices that
judiciously employ the heritage of philological exegesis,
deconstructive analysis, and the etymological reconstruction of key
terms in the service of re-situating Benjamin’s writings in broader
but hitherto under-explored legacies of philosophy, theology, and
aesthetics. In so doing, Richter’s monograph raises important
questions concerning tradition, transmission, and cultural
translatability that deserve to resonate for a long time to
come.
*Monatshefte*
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