ABSTRACT

Fragments of Modernity, first published in 1985, provides a critical introduction to the work of three of the most original German thinkers of the early twentieth century. In their different ways, all three illuminated the experience of the modern urban life, whether in mid nineteenth-century Paris, Berlin at the turn of the twentieth century or later as the vanguard city of the Weimar Republic. They related the new modes of experiencing the world to the maturation of the money economy (Simmel), the process of rationalization of capital (Kracauer) and the fantasy world of commodity fetishism (Benjamin). In each case they focus on those fragments of social experience that could best capture the sense of modernity.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|27 pages

Modernité

chapter 2|71 pages

Georg Simmel

Modernity as an Eternal Present

chapter 3|78 pages

Siegfried Kracauer

‘Exemplary Instances’ of Modernity

chapter 4|79 pages

Walter Benjamin

The Prehistory of Modernity

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion