Philosophy @ UWS Seminars 2014
The Writing and Society Research Centre and Philosophy @ UWS present:

Associate Professor Alison Ross
ARC Future Fellow, Monash University


TITLE: The figures of ‘hope’ and ‘redemption’ in Benjamin’s ‘Goethe’s Elective 
Affinities’ essay

DATE/TIME: Wednesday April 2, 3.30 pm - 5.00 pm

PLACE: University of Western Sydney, Bankstown Campus, Building 3, Room 3.G.27  
[How to get to Bankstown 
Campus]<http://www.uws.edu.au/campuses_structure/cas/campuses/bankstown>

Abstract:
In ‘Goethe’s Elective Affinities’ (1924/5) Benjamin tackles the question of how 
Goethe’s novel presents the feeling of hope for redemption. The essay sets out 
a contrast between the anxiety and paralysis that Benjamin identifies as 
features of the mythic life and the transcendent breach of the revelation. The 
mythic life is guided by ambiguous sensible forms, which are presumed to 
contain meaningful communication. In contrast to myth, Benjamin describes the 
feeling of hope for redemption as akin to a caesura or break with the 
self-sufficient sensible form. The essay thus pivots on a polemic against 
aesthetic form, which Benjamin treats in the pejorative vocabulary of semblance 
and bourgeois choice. Nonetheless, Benjamin’s treatment of the feeling of hope 
for redemption has striking similarities with the aesthetic feeling of the 
sublime, as this is described in Kantian aesthetics. As such, the mark of the 
exit from the captivating semblance is arguably another aesthetic figure, 
rather than a transcendent breach. The point is admittedly a complicated one, 
especially if we take into account the fact that the sublime, in its Kantian 
articulation, is a feeling that does not require sensible presentation. Such a 
feeling, I will argue, nevertheless carries by virtue of its context and 
implications, the qualities of the aesthetic that Benjamin’s essay otherwise 
denounces as grounded in myth.

Alison 
Ross<http://www.monash.edu.au/research/people/profiles/profile.html?sid=3227&pid=3385>
 is an ARC Future Fellow in the Philosophy Department at Monash University. She 
works on the history of modern philosophy, contemporary French and German 
thought, and aesthetics. Her publications include The Aesthetic Paths of 
Philosophy: Presentation in Kant, Heidegger, Lacoue-Labarthe and Nancy (2007). 
Most recently, she has published the co-edited study Jacques Rancière and the 
Contemporary Scene (with Jean-Philippe Deranty, 2012). Her new book Walter 
Benjamin’s Concept of the Image is due out later this year.

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For future research seminars on Philosophy, please visit 
www.uws.edu.au/philosophy/seminars2014<http://www.uws.edu.au/philosophy/seminars2014>


- - - - - - - - -

Mariana Fragueiro
Administration Coordinator, Philosophy Research Initiative
University of Western Sydney
Bankstown Campus Building 5
Locked Bag 1797
Penrith NSW  2751
+61 2 9772 6190



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