ABSTRACT

This collection features original essays that examine Walter Benjamin’s and Theodor Adorno’s essays and correspondence on literature. Taken together, the essays present the view that these two monumental figures of 20th-century philosophy were not simply philosophers who wrote about literature, but that they developed their philosophies in and through their encounters with literature.

Benjamin, Adorno, and the Experience of Literature is divided into three thematic sections. The first section contains essays that directly demonstrate the ways in which literature enriched the thinking of Benjamin and Adorno. It explores themes that are recognized to be central to their thinking—mimesis, the critique of historical progress, and the loss and recovery of experience—through their readings of literary authors such as Baudelaire, Beckett, and Proust. The second section continues the trajectory of the first by bringing together four essays on Benjamin’s and Adorno’s reading of Kafka, whose work helped them develop a distinctive critique of and response to capitalism. The third and final section focuses more intently on the question of what it means to gain authentically critical insight into a literary work. The essays examine Benjamin’s response to specific figures, including Georg Büchner, Robert Walser, and Julien Green, whose work he sees as neglected, undigested, or misunderstood.

This book offers a unique examination of two pivotal 20th-century philosophers through the lens of their shared experiences with literature. It will appeal to a wide range of scholars across philosophy, literature, and German studies.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

Benjamin, Adorno, and the Experience of Literature

part I|74 pages

Benjamin and Adorno

chapter 1|18 pages

Against the Reification of History

Benjamin and Adorno on Baudelaire

chapter 2|20 pages

Theatrum Philosophicum

Thinking Literature and Politics With Walter Benjamin

chapter 3|19 pages

Adorno and Beckett

Aesthetic Mimêsis and the Language of “The New”

chapter 4|15 pages

Abysmal Humanity

Anthropological Materialism in Georg Büchner and Walter Benjamin

part II|49 pages

Kafka

chapter 5|18 pages

Breaking Through the Mythic Organization of Life

On the Critique of Capitalism in Benjamin and Kafka

chapter 6|15 pages

The Virtue or Power of the Useless

Benjamin and Adorno on Kafka

chapter 7|14 pages

Discovering the Truth of Sancho Panza

The Meaning of Comedy in Adorno’s and Benjamin’s Divergent Readings of Don Quixote

part III|38 pages

Proust

chapter 8|16 pages

Adorno and Proust

Memory, Childhood, and the Experiential Grounds of Social Criticism

chapter 9|20 pages

Seeing In, Seeing Through

Adorno and Proust

part IV|73 pages

From Hölderlin to Walser

chapter 12|14 pages

Wo bist du, Nachdenkliches!

Sobriety and Poetic Determinability in Hölderlin and Walser

chapter 13|17 pages

Romble On

Robert Walser at the Limits of Critical Theory