“The angel of history. His face is turned towards the past. Where we perceive a chain of events, he sees one single catastrophe which keeps piling wreckage upon wreckage and hurls it in front of his feet.”
Walter
Benjamin
"Even
the Dead Won't Be Safe": Walter Benjamin
"Influential
individuals can change the individual features of events and some of their
particular consequences, but they cannot change their general trend, which is
determined by other forces".
Georgi
Plekhanov
"A great man is precisely a beginner
because he sees further than others".
Georgi
Plekhanov
"A rich
old man dies; disturbed at the poverty in the world, in his will he leaves a
large sum to set up an institute which will do research on the source of this
poverty, which is, of course, himself."
Bertolt
Brecht
In 1931, Walter
Benjamin wrote in his diary that Bertolt Brecht “maintained that there were
good reasons for thinking that Trotsky was the greatest living European
writer.”[1]
Benjamin
never met Trotsky but was clearly influenced by him, as these essays in One-Way
Street show. The book is indispensable for readers of culture and politics.
They combine literary form, philosophical insight and social diagnosis.
Benjamin treats commodity society, urban life and mass culture as problems of
cognition and political practice. Benjamin’s work is so contemporary that a systematic
study of it prepares the reader to understand the crisis of culture under
capitalism and what to do about it. Benjamin’s account of the commodification
of experience, the loss of aura, and media’s role in shaping perception speaks
directly to the age of digital capitalism: social media, algorithmic spectacle
and the mass reproduction of imagery.
Born into a
wealthy business family of assimilated Ashkenazi Jews in Berlin, Benjamin's
formative years were spent in the shadow of the Weimar Republic, the crisis of
European reformism and the rise of fascism.
As Leon
Trotsky describes so beautifully, “The political situation in Germany is not
only difficult but also educational, like when a bone breaks, the rupture in
the life of the nation cuts through all tissue. The interrelationship between
classes and parties—between social anatomy and political physiology—has rarely
in any country come to light so vividly as today in Germany.
The social
crisis tears away the conventional and exposes the real. Those who are in power
today could have seemed to be nothing but ghosts not so long ago. Was the rule
of monarchy and aristocracy not swept away in 1918? Obviously, the November
Revolution did not do its work thoroughly enough. German Junkertum itself does
not feel like a ghost. On the contrary, it is working to turn the German
republic into a ghost.”[2]
Walter
Benjamin’s work, especially the fragments gathered in One‑Way Street, his essays on mechanical reproduction, the
Arcades Project and the “Theses on the Philosophy of History”, cannot be properly understood apart
from the social and class dynamics of the Weimar Republic. A reader approaching
Benjamin for the first time should see him as not an isolated intellectual or “aura‑minded” aesthete, but as a product of the
crisis of German capitalism between the world wars: inflation, mass
unemployment, the decomposition of bourgeois liberalism, the growth of mass
culture and the political crisis that produced fascism.
The Weimar
Republic (1918–1933) was a political shell overlying profound economic
dislocations: wartime devastation, the burdens of imperialist indemnities, the
crisis of international capitalism and the breakdown of pre‑war class compromises. These objective conditions shaped mass
consciousness, German party politics and intellectual life.
As Plekhanov
argued in his discussion of the role of the individual, historical
circumstances give individuals their range of action—yet within those constraints, choices
matter; neither voluntarism nor fatalism suffices. He writes, "Until the
individual has won this freedom by heroic effort in philosophical thinking, he
does not fully belong to himself, and his mental tortures are the shameful
tribute he pays to external necessity that stands opposed to him".[3]
Benjamin’s
perceptive fragments register both the objective sweep of history and the
uncertain agency of cultural actors in that sweep. Benjamin’s analyses are a
study of how capitalist social relations transform perception, memory and
experience. His discussion of the “loss of aura” under mechanical reproduction
and his montage‑style aphorisms in One‑Way Street register the ways commodity forms permeate
everyday life—reducing experience to exchange, fragmenting historical
consciousness, and producing the atomised subject susceptible to mass demagogy.
Benjamin’s
arcades and his attention to commodities are not mere literary motifs but
critical categories for understanding how capitalist social relations shape
consciousness and political possibility.
Walter Benjamin and
Leon Trotsky
At the level
of ideas and political practice, Walter Benjamin and Leon Trotsky represent two
very different responses to the convulsions of early 20th-century capitalism.
Placed within the materialist conception of history, their approaches flow
from distinct social positions, class relations and political perspectives.
To
understand their difference is to grasp how material conditions and class
struggle shape theory, not merely by individual brilliance, which both of
course had. The material conditions that produced both figures matter. Benjamin
wrote amid the collapse of European democracies and the rise of fascism, a
context that informed his aphoristic, crisis-lit reflections. Trotsky’s
analysis emerged from active leadership in revolutionary struggle and the
bitter experience of Stalinist counterrevolution—hence his sustained emphasis
on the need for an international revolutionary party and the critique of
bureaucratic degeneration.
Trotsky’s
writings epitomise Marxist historical materialism and the dialectical method:
theory as a scientific instrument for analysing capitalist contradictions and
guiding revolutionary practice. His essays on culture—most famously Literature
and Revolution and Culture and Socialism—argue that the
working class must appropriate the accumulated achievements of past culture,
master technique, and subordinate aesthetics to the objective task of socialist
transformation while resisting crude reductionism.
Trotsky’s
approach to technology was groundbreaking; writing in Culture and Socialism,
one of the notes lying before me asks, "Does culture drive technology, or
technology culture?" This is the wrong way to pose the question.
Technology cannot be counterposed to culture, for it is culture's mainspring.
Without technology, there is no culture. The growth of technology drives
culture forward. But the science and broader culture that arise from technology
give powerful impetus to its growth. Here, there is a dialectical interaction.”[4]
Benjamin, by
contrast, was a philosophically rich and often melancholic critic whose
writings—flashing with literary insight—tend toward allegory, aesthetics and a
messianic conception of history. In works such as “Theses on the Philosophy of
History,” which is not in this book, he wrote The class struggle, which is
always present to a historian influenced by Marx, is a fight for the crude and
material things without which no refined and spiritual things could exist. [5]
Benjamin emphasises
interruption, memory and a theological-materialist image of history that
foregrounds the ruins and suffering of the past. His thought is dense with
literary metaphor and emphasises the ethical task of remembrance rather than
programmatic political strategy. Crucially, Benjamin does not treat culture as
epiphenomenal in a trivial sense. Cultural forms mediate class struggle; they
can both mask and reveal social contradictions. But from a Marxist standpoint,
these cultural phenomena are rooted in the material base. They must be understood
as follows: changes in production, mass media, and social organisation produce
new forms of ideology and temperament. This dialectical relation—base shaping the
superstructure, and superstructural forms feeding back into class politics—must
guide our reading of Benjamin.
Benjamin’s Attitude
Towards Fascism
Benjamin’s
writings were composed amid the disintegration of democratic institutions and
the rise of fascist movements that exploited cultural resentment, myth and a
politics of destiny. A political materialist account links cultural shifts to
the left's organisational weaknesses. Trotsky’s warning that revolutions and
counter‑revolutions hinge on party preparedness and leadership is
instructive: cultural critique without programmatic and organisational content
cannot substitute for political intervention. Benjamin’s diagnosis of the
cultural terrain is thus necessary but insufficient on its own. It needs to be
welded to a program that organises the working class to resist and seize power.
Benjamin had
a fatalistic attitude towards the rise of fascism, expressed in this quote: “The
angel of history. His face is turned towards the past. Where we perceive a
chain of events, he sees one single catastrophe which keeps piling wreckage
upon wreckage and hurls it in front of his feet.”
Some time
after writing these lines, Benjamin, fleeing the Nazis, took his own life in
1940. His personal situation was desperate; stranded on the French-Spanish
border, he anticipated his own immediate arrest by the Nazis. On the one hand,
the pessimistic viewpoint expressed in that citation stemmed from personal
despair. At the same time, it was nourished by confusion arising from
unresolved questions concerning the rise of fascism in Europe and the political
degeneration of the Soviet Union under Stalinism.
Benjamin,
who was familiar with Trotsky's writings, knew that Stalin had murdered almost
all his left-wing opponents and had formed an alliance with Hitler.
Nevertheless, among broad circles of intellectuals, some supported Stalin as
the only way to avert the emergence of a fascist Europe. The extension of
Stalinism into Eastern Europe after the war helped thwart layers of the
intelligentsia from coming to grips with this issue. Benjamin did not end his
life a supporter of Stalin. But his friends in the Frankfurt School certainly,
and like Benjamin, had no faith in the revolutionary capacity of the
international working class.
Benjamin’s
work remains valuable for understanding ideology, media and memory in the age
of social media, targeted advertising and spectacle. He offers the reader an indispensable
tool for understanding how capitalist modernity shapes thought and feeling. It
will take a classical Marxist to synthesise these insights with a rigorous,
materialist account of capitalism’s laws and with a program for proletarian
organisation and struggle.
NOTES
Walter
Benjamin, Selected Writings, Volume 2: 1927–1934 (Cambridge,
MA: Belknap Press, 1999)
The IIRE is
working on a new collection of Trotsky's writings on fascism. This new
translation of a 1932 article by Trotsky is part of this project. This article
was originally published in the journal Die Weltbühne ('The World Stage'). Die
Weltbühne was an important journal of the Independent intellectual left during
the Weimar Republic. Cooperators and contributors included Carl von Ossietzky,
Kurt Hiller, Erich Mühsam, Fritz Sternberg, Heinrich Ströbel, Kurt Tucholsky
and others.
[1]
Walter Benjamin, Selected Writings, Volume 2: 1927–1934 (Cambridge, MA: Belknap
Press, 1999), p. 477.
[2]
Leon Trotsky: The German Enigma-https://www.iire.org/node/1003
[3]
On the Role of the Individual in History-www.marxists.org/archive/plekhanov/1898/xx/individual.html
[4]
Culture and Socialism – 1927-www.wsws.org/en/articles/2008/10/cult-o23.html
[5]
Theses on the Philosophy of History-



