Eduardo Cadava "Words of Light"
Princeton University Press | 1998-08-03 | ISBN: 0691002681 | 204 pages | PDF | 
2.3 MB

Here Eduardo Cadava demonstrates that Walter Benjamin articulates his 
conception of history through the language of photography. Focusing on 
Benjamin's discussions of the flashes and images of history, he argues that the 
questions raised by this link between photography and history touch on issues 
that belong to the entire trajectory of his writings: the historical and 
political consequences of technology, the relation between reproduction and 
mimesis, images and history, remembering and forgetting, allegory and mourning, 
and visual and linguistic representation. The book establishes the photographic 
constellation of motifs and themes around which Benjamin organizes his texts 
and thereby becomes a lens through which we can begin to view his analysis of 
the convergence between the new technological media and a revolutionary concept 
of historical action and understanding.

Written in the form of theses--what Cadava calls "snapshots in prose"--the book 
memorializes Benjamin's own thetic method of writing. It enacts a mode of 
conceiving history that is neither linear nor successive, but rather 
discontinuous--constructed from what Benjamin calls "dialectical images." In 
this way, it not only suggests the essential rapport between the fragmentary 
form of Benjamin's writing and his effort to write a history of modernity but 
it also skillfully clarifies the relation between Benjamin and his 
contemporaries, the relation between fascism and aesthetic ideology. It gives 
us the most complete picture to date of Benjamin's reflections on history.

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