Weak Messianism: Walter Benjamin’s Arcades Project
March 11, 2010 by biotechconnection.com · 3 Comments
Alexander Gelley, Professor of Comparative Literature at UC Irvine, talks about his book on Walter Benjamin, with particular focus on Benjamin’s conception of history and urban culture. Walter Benjamin, the German-Jewish thinker of the Weimar period, left his Arcades Project unfinished when he died in 1940. Its aim was to awaken a collective subject, heir of the Marxist proletariat, a collective not yet actual and still under the spell of the “phantasmagoria” of the nineteenth-century. Benjamin’s “weak messianism” is best conceived as a form of writing designed to incite a readership by means of image, example, anecdote, citation. Series: Humanitas [9/2008] [Humanities] [Show ID: 14864]














improve your english, and after that, your panegyric
This was very helpful. I wish there had been more time to discuss the arcades project, but I will look for Prof Gelley’s writing about Benjamin.
thanks for this.
Germans block Marxism and Zionism has brought us a Palestinian Holocaust and the racism of “we are chosen” Please you are hypocrites and self serving egotists. You are no better than Nazis different label same vinegar. The old game of world dominion our way or die