Saturnine Vision and the Question of Difference: Reflections on Walter Benjamin's Theory of Language

Walter Benjamin's writings do not owe their intelligibility to their indebtedness to one or more specific brands of philosophical thought, but to Benjamin's primary concern with the most elementary distinctions of philosophy itself. Chief among these distinctions is that of philosophical t...

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Main Author: Rodolphe Gasché
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: New Prairie Press 1986-09-01
Series:Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature
Online Access:http://newprairiepress.org/sttcl/vol11/iss1/5
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author Rodolphe Gasché
author_facet Rodolphe Gasché
author_sort Rodolphe Gasché
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description Walter Benjamin's writings do not owe their intelligibility to their indebtedness to one or more specific brands of philosophical thought, but to Benjamin's primary concern with the most elementary distinctions of philosophy itself. Chief among these distinctions is that of philosophical thought itself, or the difference it makes with respect to the realms of nature, myth, or the appearances. By focusing on the notions of "communicability" and "translatability," philosophical difference, for Benjamin, shall be shown to rest on structures within the language of man and art that aim at breaking through language's mythical interconnectedness, its weblike quality, its textuality, toward the absolute Other of divine language. Yet, the fundamental philosophical law not to mix genres or realms, as well as the transcending power of philosophical difference, because it remains caught in what it seeks to transgress, are dependent, as far as their success is concerned, on the ultimate justification by the (theological) difference of the absolute Other of divine language. It is, however, not in the power of philosophy to secure all by itself this necessary legitimation.
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spelling doaj.art-a499515b78bf46198332f8e52dc724902022-12-21T21:17:25ZengNew Prairie PressStudies in 20th & 21st Century Literature2334-44151986-09-0111110.4148/2334-4415.11905601646Saturnine Vision and the Question of Difference: Reflections on Walter Benjamin's Theory of LanguageRodolphe GaschéWalter Benjamin's writings do not owe their intelligibility to their indebtedness to one or more specific brands of philosophical thought, but to Benjamin's primary concern with the most elementary distinctions of philosophy itself. Chief among these distinctions is that of philosophical thought itself, or the difference it makes with respect to the realms of nature, myth, or the appearances. By focusing on the notions of "communicability" and "translatability," philosophical difference, for Benjamin, shall be shown to rest on structures within the language of man and art that aim at breaking through language's mythical interconnectedness, its weblike quality, its textuality, toward the absolute Other of divine language. Yet, the fundamental philosophical law not to mix genres or realms, as well as the transcending power of philosophical difference, because it remains caught in what it seeks to transgress, are dependent, as far as their success is concerned, on the ultimate justification by the (theological) difference of the absolute Other of divine language. It is, however, not in the power of philosophy to secure all by itself this necessary legitimation.http://newprairiepress.org/sttcl/vol11/iss1/5
spellingShingle Rodolphe Gasché
Saturnine Vision and the Question of Difference: Reflections on Walter Benjamin's Theory of Language
Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature
title Saturnine Vision and the Question of Difference: Reflections on Walter Benjamin's Theory of Language
title_full Saturnine Vision and the Question of Difference: Reflections on Walter Benjamin's Theory of Language
title_fullStr Saturnine Vision and the Question of Difference: Reflections on Walter Benjamin's Theory of Language
title_full_unstemmed Saturnine Vision and the Question of Difference: Reflections on Walter Benjamin's Theory of Language
title_short Saturnine Vision and the Question of Difference: Reflections on Walter Benjamin's Theory of Language
title_sort saturnine vision and the question of difference reflections on walter benjamin s theory of language
url http://newprairiepress.org/sttcl/vol11/iss1/5
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