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Location Call # Volume Status
 Streaming Media      
Title Hannah Arendt: On Walter Benjamin.
OCLC kan6982228
Music number 6982228 Kanopy
Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : Michael Blackwood Productions, 1968.
[San Francisco, California, USA] : Kanopy Streaming, 2019.
Description 1 online resource (streaming video file) (66 minutes) : digital, .flv file, sound
digital
video file MPEG-4 Flash
LC Subject heading/s History.
Philosophy and religion.
Documentary films.
Other
Genre heading/s
Documentary films.
General note Title from title frames.
Film
In Process Record.
Participant or performer note Hannah Arendt, Peter Stadelmayer
Chronology/place Originally produced by Michael Blackwood Productions in 1968.
Summary An intimate and intellectual lecture given by Hannah Arendt about the work and fate of her friend and colleague in the philosophical field, Walter Benjamin. Delivered in January 1968 at the Goethe House in New York, Arendt's speech paid tribute to Benjamin's ideologies surrounding linguistic philosophy, history and literature. Arendt notes the importance of German-Jewish literature in Benjamin's work, insisting that "without being a poet, he thought poetically. For him the metaphor was the greatest gift of language, because it transforms the invisible into the sensual." (Hannah Ardent) Through his passion for writers such as Kafka, Goethe and Proust, Benjamin honed his own sort of theology revolving around classic texts, preservation, and the collecting of wisdom.
System details note Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Language note In English
Permanent link back to this item
https://novacat.nova.edu:446/record=b4015100~S13

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