Book chapter
The thought of history in Benjamin and Deleuze
Deleuze and History, pp.103-118
Published to Edinburgh Scholarship Online
2009
Abstract
This chapter reports the concept of history in Walter Benjamin and Gilles Deleuze. Deleuze's ‘personal’ reading of Benjamin is completely problematic in that his reflections identify, and perhaps even go so far as to define the limits of what is conceptually possible in terms of the earlier study. Deleuze's interest in Benjamin must be seen in the context of the uniquely transcendental combination. Philosophical theses emerge as conceptual dramatisations of an Idea such that their very object is no longer amenable to simple logic, but rather to the metaphysics of those transcendental conditions of historical antecedence that adduce a thesis' virtual significance in the world at all. The elements of philosophical discourse that Benjamin and Deleuze try to suggest are what they refer to as those ‘baroque’ moments which behove a certain reconsideration of the sense of Darstellung in Immanuel Kant's transcendental project.
Details
- Title
- The thought of history in Benjamin and Deleuze
- Authors/Creators
- T. Flanagan (Author/Creator)
- Contributors
- J. Bell (Editor)C. Colebrook (Editor)
- Publication Details
- Deleuze and History, pp.103-118
- Publisher
- Published to Edinburgh Scholarship Online
- Identifiers
- 991005542973707891
- Copyright
- © 2009 Oxford University Press
- Murdoch Affiliation
- Murdoch University
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Book chapter
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