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Reflections

Page 39

by Walter Benjamin


  Gründel, Ernst Günter, 1903–1946, German writer, 245

  Guttmann, Simon, friend of Walter Benjamin’s, 23, 25

  Gutzkow, Karl, 1811–1878, German novelist, dramatist, and essayist, 171

  H

  Haecker, Theodor, 1879–1945, German Catholic philosopher, 278

  Hamann, Johann Georg, 1730–1788, German writer and theologian, xxiii, 338, 343

  Haroun-al-Raschid, caliph in Baghad, 262

  Hašek, Jaroslav, 1883–1923, Czech novelist and short story writer, 224

  Hauff, Wilhelm, 1802–1827, German romantic author, 35n

  Hauptmann, Gerhart, 1862–1946, German dramatist, novelist, and poet, 217

  Haussmann, Baron Georges Eugène, 1809–91, French administrator, 168–71

  Heartfield, John (Helmut Herzfelde), 1891–1968, German photographer, xxxv, 242

  Hebel, Johann Peter, 1760–1826, Swiss-born German poet, editor, and author of almanac stories, xlii, 202, 257–58

  Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 1770–1831, German philosopher, xxvi, xxxiii, xliii, 172

  Heidegger, Martin, 1889–1976, German philosopher, xxiii

  Heine, Heinrich, 1797–1856, German lyric poet and literary critic, x, xxxvii, 227, 254, 285

  Heinle, Friedrich C., d. 1914, German poet and friend of Walter Benjamin’s, 18, 20, 22–25

  Heissenbüttel, Helmut, 1921–1996, German poet, novelist, and critic, ix

  Hertz, Henri, friend of Apollinaire’s, 193

  Herzfelde, Wieland, 1896–1988, German writer and brother of John Heartfield, 23

  Hesse, Hermann, 1877–1962, German novelist and poet, xxi

  Hessel, Franz, 1880–1941, German translator and editor, 8, 10

  Hillel, fl. 30 BC–9 AD, Jewish teacher, 98

  Hiller, Kurt, 1885–1972, German publisher, critic, and essayist, 239, 314n

  Hitler, Adolf, 1889–1945, viii, xiv, xliii, 222, 229–30

  Hoffmann, E. T. A., 1776–1822, German music critic, composer, and writer of fantastic tales, 213

  Hofmannsthal, Hugo von, 1874–1929, Austrian poet, playwright, and essayist, xiii, xx

  Hölderlin, Friedrich, 1770–1843, German poet, translator of Pindar, Sophocles, and Latin poets, xi, xli–xlii, 19, 323

  Hölty, Ludwig Heinrich, 1748–1776, German poet, 282

  Holz, Detlev, pseudonym of Benjamin, xiv

  Horkheimer, Max, 1895–1973, German philosopher and sociologist, xiv

  Hugo, Victor, 1802–1885, French poet, novelist, and dramatist, 163, 198

  Husserl, Edmund, 1859–1938, German philosopher, founder of phenomenology, x

  J

  Jahnn, Hans Henny, 1894–1959, German novelist and dramatist, 226

  Jameson, Frederic, 1934–, American literary critic, viii

  Jay, Martin, 1944–, English writer, ix

  Jensen, Johannes V., 1873–1950, Danish poet and novelist, 152

  Joël, Ernst, physician and friend of Walter Benjamin’s, xxi, 17, 147

  Joyce, James, 1882–1941, Irish novelist and short story writer, xxxvi

  K

  Kafka, Franz, 1883–1924, Jewish novelist and short story writer, x–xi, xv, xxxiii, xlii, 217–21

  Kainz, Josef, 1858–1910, German actor, 49

  Kant, Immanuel, 1724–1804, German philosopher, xi, xxi, xxiii, 259, 298

  Kästner, Erich, 1899–1974, German satirist, 244–245

  Kepler, Johannes, 1571–1630, German astronomer, 98

  Kerr, Alfred, 1867–1948, German theater critic, 277

  Kierkegaard, Sören, 1813–1855, Danish philosopher and writer on theology, xxxvii, 265, 275, 345

  Klee, Paul, 1879–1940, German painter, 287

  Kleist, Heinrich von, 1777–1811, German dramatist, 217

  Knoche, teacher of Walter Benjamin, 47

  Kommerell, Max, 1902–1944, German writer and literary historian, xlii

  Korsch, Karl, 1889–1961, German Marxist, 218

  Kracauer, Siegfried, 1889–1966, German sociologist and journalist, xlii

  Kraus, Karl, 1874–1936, Austrian journalist, poet, and critic, ix, xxxvi–xxxix, 154, 220, 253–86, 288

  Krüger, Stephanus Johannes Paulus, 1825–1904, South African statesman, 213

  Kun, Béla, 1885–1937, Hungarian Communist, 227

  Kurella, Alfred, 1895–1975, German writer, editor, and politician, 226–28

  L

  Lacis, Asja, 1891–1979, Latvian actress, xiii, xix, xxxi

  Lafargue, Paul, 1842–1911, French socialist, 169

  Landau, Luise von, schoolmate of Walter Benjamin’s, 46

  Lao-tse, ca. 604–531 BC, Chinese philosopher, 219

  Lasker-Schüler, Else, 1876–1945, German Jewish poet, 23, 278

  Lassalle, Ferdinand, 1825–1864, German socialist and publicist, 273

  Lauglé, coauthor of Louis et le Saint-Simonien, 161

  Lautréamont (Isidore Ducasse), 1846–1870, French writer of prose poems, 189, 197–98

  Le Carré, John (David Cornwell), 1931–, English novelist, x

  Le Corbusier (Charles Edouard Jeanneret-Gris), 1887–1965, Swiss architect, painter, and sculptor, 200

  Le Play, Frédéric, 1806–1882, French mining engineer and social reformer, 171

  Lederer, Emil, 1882–1939, German economist, 34

  Lenin, Nikolai (Vladimir Ilich Ulyanov), 1870–1924, 109, 117, 125, 130–31, 137–39, 189, 216–17

  Leopardi, Giacomo, 1798–1837, Italian poet, 162

  Leroux, Gaston, 1868–1927, French author of detective novels, 68

  Lichtenberg, Georg Christoph, 1742–1799, German physicist and satirist, 92, 246, 288

  Liegler, Leopold, 1882–1949, Austrian writer, 264

  Liguori, Alfonso Maria de, 1696–1787, Italian theologian and founder of the Redemptorist Order, 173

  Loos, Adolf, 1870–1933, Austrian architect, 254, 261, 267, 278, 287

  Louis VII, ca. 1120–1180, French king, 191

  Louis-Philippe, 1773–1850, French king, 163–64, 170

  Lukács, Georg, 1885–1971, Hungarian Marxist literary historian, vii, xix, xxxiii, 226–29

  Luther, Martin, 1483–1546, 81

  M

  Mallarmé, Stéphane, 1842–1898, French symbolist poet, xliii, 37, 81

  Mann, Heinrich, 1871–1950, German novelist, xxxv, 239

  Marcuse, Herbert, 1898–1979, German-American philosopher and social critic, xxxv

  Marx, Karl, 1818–1883, German philosopher, 158, 162–64, 213–14, 225, 227–28, 275, 284–85, 307

  Matkowsky, Adalbert, 1857–1909, German actor, 48

  Maublanc, René, 20th-century French writer and dramatist, 249–50

  Mauthner, Fritz, 1849–1923, Austrian writer and philosopher, xxxvii

  McLuhan, Marshall, 1911–1980, Canadian literary and social critic, xx

  Mehring, Franz, radical German publicist, 245

  Meidner, Ludwig, 1884–1966, German expressionist painter, 23

  Mencken, H. L., 1880–1956, American editor, xxxvii

  Meyerhold, Karl Theodor Kasimir, 1874–1940, Russian actor and stage director, 125

  Michaelis, Karin, 1872–1950, Danish novelist, 218, 265

  Michelet, Jules, 1798–1874, French historian, 157

  Mickiewicz, Adam, 1798–1855, Polish poet and “national bard,” 198

  Milton, John, 1608–1674, 198

  Molière (Jean Baptiste Poquelin), 1622–73, French dramatist, 326–27

  Monticelli, Adolphe, 1824–1886, French painter, 142

  Müller, Friedrich (“Maler” Müller), 1749–1825, German author of idylls, xxiii, 347

  Musset, Alfred de, 1810–1857, French poet and dramatist, 198

  N

  Nadar (Félix Tournachon), 1820–1910, French photographer and caricaturist, 160

  Napoleon, 1769–1821, 156

  Napoleon III, 1808–1873, 171

  Naville, Pierre, 1903–1993, French sociologist, 195, 201

  Neher, Carola, 1900–1
936, German actress, 216

  Nestroy, Johann, 1801–1862, Austrian dramatist, xxxviii, 266, 277–78

  Nguyen-Trong-Hiep, author of Paris, Capital of France, 155

  Nietzsche, Friedrich, 1844–1900, German philosopher, xxxvii, 33, 202, 219, 254, 281, 322

  Niobe, figure in Greek mythology, 309–10, 312

  O

  Offenbach, Jacques, 1819–1888, French composer, 163, 266, 275–79

  Ottwald, Ernst, 1901–1943, German socialist, 226

  Oud, Jacobus Johannes Pieter, 1890–1963, Dutch architect, 200

  P

  Paul, Jean (Jean Paul Friedrich Richter), 1763–1825, German poet, 158

  Péladan, Joséphin, 1859–1918, French writer, 174

  Peter the Great, 1672–1725, Russian czar, 126

  Petrarch, 1304–1374, Italian scholar and poet, 153

  Pfemfert, Franz, 1879–1954, German editor and writer, 20n, 23

  Pilniak, Boris (Boris AndreyevichVogau), 1894–1938, Russian novelist, 114, 126

  Pindar, ca. 522–ca. 443 BC, Greek poet, 47

  Plato, 427?–347 BC, 232, 245

  Poe, Edgar Allan, 1809–1849, American poet, 67, 165–66, 199

  Pompey, 106–48 BC, Roman statesman, 34–35

  Prévost, Jean, 1462–1529, Flemish painter, 159

  Prometheus, 309

  Proust, Marcel, 1871–1922, French novelist, xii, xxxix, xlii, 6, 127

  Pufahl, Helene, first teacher of Walter Benjamin, 46–47

  R

  Radek, Karl (Karl Sobelsohn), 1885–1939, Russian socialist politician, xxxvi

  Radt, Fritz, husband of Jula Cohn, 35n

  Radt, Grete, Walter Benjamin’s first fiancée, wife of Alfred Cohn, 34, 35n

  Raimund, Ferdinand, 1790–1836, Austrian actor and dramatist, 281

  Rembrandt, 1606–1669, 149

  Renger-Patzsch, Albert, 1897–1966, German photographer, 242

  Renvers, Professor R., Benjamin family physician, 41

  Riefenstahl, Leni, 1902–2003, German actress and film director, xxxv

  Riegl, Alois, 1858–1905, Austrian art historian, 33

  Rilke, Rainer Maria, 1875–1926, German poet and prose writer, xviii, 9

  Rimbaud, Arthur, 1854–1891, French symbolist poet, 171, 188–89, 197, 199, 202, 216

  S

  Sacco, Nicola, 1891–1927, anarchist, executed for murder, 190

  Sainte-Beuve, Charles Auguste, 1804–1869, French literary critic, vii

  Saint-Germain, count of, 18th-century Portuguese adventurer, 92

  Saint-Pol Roux (Paul Roux), 1861–1940, French symbolist poet, 189, 196

  Scheerbart, Paul, 1863–1915, German writer, 157–58, 195, 287

  Scheu, Robert, 1873–1964, Austrian poet, 260, 273

  Schiller, Friedrich von, 1759–1805, 56, 284

  Schliemann, Heinrich, 1822–1890, German archaeologist, xvii

  Schober, Johannes, 1874–1932, Austrian statesman, 277

  Schoen, Ernst, 1894–1960, German musician, poet, and translator, 34

  Scholem, Gershom (Gerhard), 1897–1982, professor of Jewish mysticism in Jerusalem, viii–ix, xii–xiv

  Scipio Africanus, 237–183 BC, Roman general, 95

  Seghers, Anna, 1900–1983, German novelist, 229

  Seligson, Carla, 1893–1956, friend of Walter Benjamin, 20n

  Seligson, Rika, d. 1914, 20n

  Seligson, Traute, d. 1915, sister of Rika and Carla Seligson, 20n

  Shakespeare, William, 1564–1616, xxxviii, 96, 127, 230, 252, 266, 277–78, 284

  Simenon, Georges, 1903–1989, Belgian novelist and short-story writer, xlii

  Sorel, Georges, 1847–1922, French socialist, xxv, xlii, 306–7, 311

  Sôren, Paul, 1879–1940, German painter, xxxvii

  Soupault, Philippe, 1897–1990, French surrealist poet and novelist, 187, 198–99

  Southey, Robert, 1774–1843, English poet, historian, and man of letters, 198

  Spinoza, Baruch, 1632–1677, 292

  Stalin, Joseph, 1879–1953, 225, 227

  Stampflinger, K. A., pseudonym of Benjamin, xiv

  Steffin, Margarete, 1908–1941, bookkeeper, friend of Brecht’s, 226

  Stein, Gertrude, 1874–1946, American poet, xxiv

  Stendhal (Henri Beyle), 1783–1842, French novelist, xx

  Stifter, Adalbert, 1805–1868, Austrian author of novels and novellas, xii, xxxix, xlii, 258–59, 284, 286

  Swift, Jonathan, 1667–1745, xxxvii, 213, 275

  Szondi, Peter, 1929–1971, German literary historian, xx

  T

  Taine, Hippolyte, 1828–1893, French historian and philosopher, 161

  Toussenel, natural scientist, 162

  Tretiakov, Sergei, 1892–1939, Russian writer, xxix, xxxv–xxxvi, 218, 226, 235–36

  Trotsky, Leon (Lev Davydovich Bronstein) 1879–1940, 202, 227–228, 239n

  Tucholsky, Kurt, 1890–1935, German satirist and journalist, 245

  U

  Ullstein, Ilse, schoolmate of Walter Benjamin’s, 46

  Unger, author of Politik und Metaphysik, 303n, 305n

  V

  Valentin, Karl, 1882–1948, German comic, 226

  Vanderbusch, coauthor of Louis et le Saint-Simonien, 161

  Vanzetti, Bartolomeo, 1888–1927, anarchist, executed for murder, 190

  Viertel, Berthold, 1885–1953, Austrian dramaturgist and director, 264, 280

  Virgil, 70–19 BC, 225

  Vogt, Karl, 1817–1895, German scientist and materialist, 202

  W

  Wagner, Richard, 1813–1883, German composer, 168

  Walzel, Oskar, 1864–1944, German literary historian, 127

  Weber, Marianne, 1870–1954, German writer of feminist works, wife of the economist Max Weber, 18

  Wedekind, Frank, 1864–1918, German dramatist, 278

  Weininger, Otto, 1880–1903, Austrian philosopher and psychologist, 278

  Wellek, René, 1903–1995, American literary critic, ix

  Wertmüller, Lina, ca. 1930–, Italian film director, xx

  Wiertz, Antoine J., 1806–1865, Belgian painter, 160

  Wittgenstein, Ludwig, 1889–1951, Austrian philosopher, xxxvii

  Wyneken, Gustav, 1875–1964, German pedagogue and school reformer, x–xi

  Z

  Zola, Émile, 1840–1902, 158

  Zoroaster (Zarathustra), 6th century BC, founder of ancient Persian religion, 213

  About the Author

  Walter Benjamin (1892–1940) was a German-Jewish Marxist literary critic, essayist, translator, and philosopher. He was at times associated with the Frankfurt School of critical theory and was also greatly inspired by the Marxism of Bertolt Brecht and Jewish mysticism as presented by Gershom Scholem.

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  Footnotes

  * Benjamin is referring to Paris.—ED.

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  * The beginning of this passage is missing in the manuscript; Benjamin is talking about his school experiences.—ED.

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  * Die Aktion, a political journal of revolutionary tendency, founded in 1911 by Franz Pfemfert, dedicated to the revolution in literature and the visual arts.—ED.

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  † Traute, Carla, and Rika Seligson.—ED.

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  * Alfred Cohn.—ED.

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  * Jula Cohn married Fritz Radt, whose sister, Grete Radt, became the wife of Alfred Cohn.—ED.

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  † The sentence breaks off without punctuation at the end of a page, and the continuation is no doubt missing. The sonnet is likely to have been by Benjamin but has not been preserved.—ED.

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  * See Hauff�
��s fairy tale, “The Cold Heart.”—ED.

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  * Professor R. Renvers lived at 24 Nettelbeckstrasse.—ED.

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  * NEP—New Economic Policy.—ED.

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  * Soviet Federated Socialist Republic.—ED.

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  * The name, probably of the intended intermediary, is not clearly legible; perhaps Hans Henny Jahnn?—ED.

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  † Uncertain reading.—ED.

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  * Address at the Institute for the Study of Fascism in Paris on April 27, 1934.—ED.

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  * Benjamin himself; see Schriften, Frankfurt/M., 1955, vol. I, p. 384.—ED.

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  * In place of this sentence there was in the manuscript originally a different one that was deleted: “Or, to speak with Trotsky: ‘If the enlightened pacifists attempt to abolish war by means of rationalistic argument, they simply make fools of themselves, but if the armed masses begin to use the arguments of reason against war, that means the end of war.’”—ED.

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  * See Introduction, pp. xxxv–xxxvi.—ED.

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  * Karl Kraus translated and edited Offenbach’s La Vie Parisienne.—ED.

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  * Granat means “pomegranate”; Granate, “grenade” or “shell.”—TRANS.

 

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