Constellations of Reading
Walter Benjamin in Figures of Actuality
					
	
		©2009
		Monographs
		
			
				
				392 Pages
			
		
	
				
				
					
						
					
				
				
				
					
						Series: 
	
		
			
				Cultural History and Literary Imagination, Volume 13
			
		
	
					
				
				
			Summary
			
				How to read Walter Benjamin today? This book argues that the proper way is through an approach which recognizes and respects his own peculiar theorization of the act of reading and the politics of interpretation that this entails. The approach must be figural, that is, focused on images, and driven by the notion of actualization. Figural reading, in the very sui generis Benjaminian way, understands figures as constellations, whereby an image of the past juxtaposes them with an image of the present and is thus actualized. To apply this method to Benjamin’s own work means first to identify some figures. The book singles out the Flâneur, the Detective, the Prostitute and the Ragpicker, and then sets them alongside a contemporary account of the same figure: the Flâneur in Juan Goytisolo’s Landscapes after the Battle (1982), the Detective in Paul Auster’s New York Trilogy (1987), the Prostitute in Dacia Maraini’s Dialogue between a Prostitute and her Client (1973), and the Ragpicker in Mudrooroo’s The Mudrooroo/Müller Project (1993). The book thereby, on the one hand, analyses the politics of reading Benjamin today and, on the other, sets his work against a variety of contemporary aesthetics and politics of interpretation.
			
		
	Details
- Pages
 - 392
 - Publication Year
 - 2009
 - ISBN (Softcover)
 - 9783039118601
 - Language
 - English
 - Keywords
 - Politics of Interpretation Detectives Dialectics Contemporary Aesthetics
 - Published
 - Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2009. 392 pp.
 - Product Safety
 - Peter Lang Group AG