Walter Benjamin's allegory and the modernity

Authors

  • João Batista Pereira UNILAB

Keywords:

Allegory, Walter Benjamin, Modernity

Abstract

Committed since Classical Antiquity with the rhetoric and the rules of oratory, the allegory was like a displaced metaphor, striving for clarity of speech. That purpose was transfigured throughout the Middle Ages, when its use was linked to decency and morality, a convention which was changed in Romanticism, when it met its demise. From the texts proposed by Walter Benjamin, its existence was perceived as a resource illuminating the aesthetic universe in the social times, a figure of speech tied to the historical context. We adopt in this article a dialectical perspective as a methodological that more accurately illustrates the contours assumed by allegory in modernity. With the light of experiences in a changing world of insecurity in its own values, it is now envisioned as a category indicting of fragmented representation of society, allowing us to understand the limits of literature as a vehicle in critical of reality.

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Author Biography

João Batista Pereira, UNILAB

Profesor Adjunto do Departamento de Letras da UNILAB

Published

2013-12-11

How to Cite

Pereira, J. B. (2013). Walter Benjamin’s allegory and the modernity. FronteiraZ. Journal of the Postgraduate Studies in Literature and Literary Criticism Program, (11), 272–291. Retrieved from https://revistas.pucsp.br/index.php/fronteiraz/article/view/16678

Issue

Section

Literary Essays