Kevin Drews, Szilvia Gellai (Hg.)

The Opportunities of Laughter: On the Aesthetics and Politics of Humour in Walter Benjamin
Special Issue: Forum for Modern Language Studies

Bd. 61, Heft 3
Oxford University Press, Oxford 2025, 168 Seiten
ISSN 0015-8518 (Print), 1471-6860 (Online)

At first sight, Walter Benjamin and laughter may seem to be an unlikely connection, particularly when humour is understood as a personal disposition, a receptivity for the comic. The image of Benjamin ingrained in collective memory is undoubtedly that of the melancholic intellectual. This is how he appears in the iconic photos taken of him by Germaine Krull and Gisèle Freund: deeply immersed in thought, often with his head resting on his fist or absorbed in old folios at the Bibliothèque Nationale. It is tempting to describe these images as surrounded by an aura, whose decay Benjamin even saw at work in portrait photography. Such auratic perception would be partly due to self-staging, partly to the œuvre’s reception. On the one hand, the images convey something of a ‘secretiveness bordering on eccentricity’ that Benjamin is said to have cultivated around his person. On the other hand, scholarship has identified a hidden self-portrait in Benjamin’s preoccupation with the melancholy figure of the allegorist.

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Veranstaltung

Workshop
13.04.2023 – 15.04.2023 · 18.00 Uhr

Chancen des Gelächters. Zur Ästhetik und Politik des Humors bei Walter Benjamin

Leibniz-Zentrum für Literatur- und Kulturforschung, Schützenstr. 18, Aufgang B, 3. Et., 10117 Berlin; Walter Benjamin Archiv, Luisenstraße 60, 10117 Berlin

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