Moralia . Walter Benjamin, student of monads, theorist of dialectic at a standstill, naturally belongs in this great company. In his essay on Surrealism, moving with concerted effort away from his early theological orientation toward a profane critical stance, he calls for the possession of the image sphere "in which political materialism and physical nature share the inner man, the psyche, the individual, or whatever else we wish to throw to them, with dialectical justice, so that no limb remains unrent." 2 Here, as much as in Brecht's epic theater, we see the aggressive assertion of a left-wing modernist program with studious fragmentation placed strategically at its heart.
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That Jewish messianism and all its mystical baggage should be a crucial component in this program remains as potentially scandalous today as when Benjamin debated with Scholem, Adorno, and Brecht. Perhaps this is because the contradictions inherent in Benjamin's work remain as vexing as they ever were. On the other hand, it can also be said of Benjamin that theological thought, as it infects historical materialismand vice versais quite compatible with the form as well as the content of the body of its intellectual host. Surely the Theses on the Philosophy of History, a gnomic masterpiece of modernist technique, can also be read as a midrash, turning and turning the messianic idea under the black light of history. The resulting constellation, sealing Benjamin's canon as it permanently problematizes his materialist version of redemptive criticism, also opens itself provocatively to the continuum of commentary that is the sine qua non of the Jewish textual tradition. What Scholem calls the "religious dignity" of commentary is transferred to the profane ground of materialist speculation: what is produced is an uncanny form as ridden by doubt and hope as any of Kafka's parables.
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Because we have learned to distrust totality and the affirmation of presence, knowledge of this sort can only apprehend itself through the midrashic and kabbalistic techniques so strangely rediscovered by modernism. The peculiar constellation made up of messianism, Marxism, and secular literature can only be addressed through fragmentary theses and the radical juxtaposition of discrete texts. Thus Benjamin becomes an exemplary figure not only for critical theory but for modern Jewish culture as well.
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In Benjamin's first thesis, historical materialism is a bold automaton, theology a wizened dwarf inhabiting its interior and controlling its
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