Description

Book Synopsis
This book investigates the relationship of the work of Walter Benjamin and Sigmund Freud, centered around Benjamin’s fractured subject. Through a reading of Benjamin’s work on sovereignty and myth, it establishes the emergence of this fractured subject in the Baroque. It then links these themes to ‘Mourning and Melancholia’ and two of Freud’s case studies, showing that melancholia and possession emerge as two responses to the baroque loss of a cosmological horizon. Turning to Benjamin’s work on the nineteenth century in the Arcades Project, it then delineates the persistence of this fractured subject, showing how Benjamin conceptualises its development over the course of modernity. Investigating the change of memory and experience in modernity, it discusses the resurfacing of melancholia as spleen, and the refracting of the fractured subject into types. Having introduced the importance of the dream in the Arcades Project and associated work, the book then examines Benjamin’s dream theory, establishing the ways it draws from Freud’s dream interpretation. Finally, it examines Benjamin’s concept of awakening as a therapeutic, collective, political gesture that points beyond the fractured subject.


Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Chapter 1 - Baroque Sovereignty and the Fractured Subject

Chapter 2 - Melancholia, Possession, Critique

Chapter 3 – Beyond the Pleasure Principle in the Arcades

Chapter 4- The Types of the 19th century: Benjamin’s Case Studies

Chapter 5 - Dreaming

Chapter 6 - Awakening

Bibliography

About the Author

The Fractured Subject: Walter Benjamin and

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    A Hardback by Betty Schulz

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      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 08/02/2023
      ISBN13: 9781538163368, 978-1538163368
      ISBN10: 1538163365

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book investigates the relationship of the work of Walter Benjamin and Sigmund Freud, centered around Benjamin’s fractured subject. Through a reading of Benjamin’s work on sovereignty and myth, it establishes the emergence of this fractured subject in the Baroque. It then links these themes to ‘Mourning and Melancholia’ and two of Freud’s case studies, showing that melancholia and possession emerge as two responses to the baroque loss of a cosmological horizon. Turning to Benjamin’s work on the nineteenth century in the Arcades Project, it then delineates the persistence of this fractured subject, showing how Benjamin conceptualises its development over the course of modernity. Investigating the change of memory and experience in modernity, it discusses the resurfacing of melancholia as spleen, and the refracting of the fractured subject into types. Having introduced the importance of the dream in the Arcades Project and associated work, the book then examines Benjamin’s dream theory, establishing the ways it draws from Freud’s dream interpretation. Finally, it examines Benjamin’s concept of awakening as a therapeutic, collective, political gesture that points beyond the fractured subject.


      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements

      Introduction

      Chapter 1 - Baroque Sovereignty and the Fractured Subject

      Chapter 2 - Melancholia, Possession, Critique

      Chapter 3 – Beyond the Pleasure Principle in the Arcades

      Chapter 4- The Types of the 19th century: Benjamin’s Case Studies

      Chapter 5 - Dreaming

      Chapter 6 - Awakening

      Bibliography

      About the Author

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