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OverviewWalter Benjamin and Theodor Adorno both turned to canonical literary narratives to determine why the Enlightenment project was derailed and how this failure might be remedied. The resultant works, Benjamin's major essay on Goethe's Elective Affinities and Adorno's meditation on the Odyssey in Dialectic of Enlightenment, are centrally concerned with the very act of narration. Márton Dornbach's groundbreaking book reconstructs a hitherto unnoticed, wide-ranging dialogue between these foundational texts of the Frankfurt School.At the heart of Dornbach's argument is a critical model that Benjamin built around the concept of caesura, a model Adorno subsequently reworked. Countering an obscurantism that would become complicit in the rise of fascism, the two theorists aligned moments of arrest in narratives mired in unreason. Although this model responded to a specific historical emergency, it can be adapted to identify utopian impulses in a variety of works. The Saving Line throws fresh light on the intellectual exchange and disagreements between Benjamin and Adorno, the problematic conjunction of secular reason and negative theology in their thinking, and their appropriations of ancient and modern legacies. It will interest scholars of philosophy and literature, critical theory, German Jewish thought, classical reception studies, and narratology. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Márton DornbachPublisher: Northwestern University Press Imprint: Northwestern University Press Weight: 0.633kg ISBN: 9780810143005ISBN 10: 0810143003 Pages: 242 Publication Date: 30 December 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsFrequently Cited Texts Introduction 1. Benjamin's Hard Caesura: The Hopeful Narrator of Elective Affinities 2. Adorno's Hard Caesura: The Impassive Homeric Narrator 3. Adorno's Soft Caesura: The Immanent Utopia of Penelope's Remark 4. Benjamin's Soft Caesura: The Immanent Utopia of the Embedded Novella Conclusion Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography IndexReviewsTrenchant, lucid, and compelling. This book is a rare achievement: a study by an extraordinarily gifted literary and philosophical thinker who patiently and carefully elucidates notoriously obscure and challenging texts, fully cognizant of the larger intellectual claims informing them and his readings of them. The book alters and deepens our understanding of Adorno and Benjamin, reveals new depths to their implicit dialogue with each other within their writings, and demonstrates how their work continues to provide insights and inspiration for the study of literary narrative. - Henry W. Pickford, author of Thinking with Tolstoy and Wittgenstein: Expression, Emotion, and Art (Northwestern University Press, 2016) Author InformationMárton Dornbach is a visiting assistant professor and director of undergraduate studies for German at Johns Hopkins University. He is the author of Receptive Spirit: German Idealism and the Dynamics of Cultural Transmission. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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