But, isn’t Timon of Athens Really Trauerspiel?: Walter Benjamin’s Modernity

Critical Horizons 16 (1):70-87 (2015)
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Abstract

I argue that Shakespeare's Timon of Athens exemplifies the concept of mourning play that Walter Benjamin had in mind when he wrote The Origin of German Tragic Drama. While others have interpreted the play in various ways, no one has attempted to understand Timon in a Benjaminesque manner that seeks to show the emergence of baroque tragedy as a new aesthetic form at odds with, and liberated from, classical tragedy's mythical foundation and instead premised on historical time and progress. In my discussion, I question the view that Timon possesses inheritable or transmissible human social bonds that can be the subject of annihilation as is the case in Shakespeare's other tragedies. Rather, Benjamin sees in allegory, as illustrated by Timon of Athens, the social condition of modernity replete with suffering, chaos, and violence, but devoid of real human bonds; indeed, it is without human meaning.

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William Louis Remley
Saint Peter's University

References found in this work

The Origin of German Tragic Drama.Walter Benjamin - 1978 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 37 (1):103-104.
Walter Benjamin, or Towards a Revolutionary Criticism.Terry Eagleton - 1984 - Studies in Soviet Thought 27 (2):179-181.
The Reconciliation of Myth: Benjamin's Homage to Bachofen.Joseph Mali - 1999 - Journal of the History of Ideas 60 (1):165-187.

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