Why did I love this book?
The exiled German critic Walter Benjamin committed suicide after he was detained on the Spanish border when fleeing from Nazi-occupied France in September 1940.
Published only in 1986 (and translated only in 1999), his Arcades Project explores the "dreamworlds" of 19th-century Paris, the "city of lights," through "the smallest and most precisely cut components"—"its arcades and its gateways, its cemeteries and bordellos, its railroad stations, and the more secret, more deeply embedded figures of the city: murders and rebellions, the bloody knots in the network of the streets, lairs of love, and conflagrations."
Benjamin's masterwork has profoundly influenced my books on Prague, which employ a similar technique of montaging fragments to illuminate the darker dreamworlds of the 20th century.
2 authors picked The Arcades Project as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
"To great writers," Walter Benjamin once wrote, "finished works weigh lighter than those fragments on which they labor their entire lives." Conceived in Paris in 1927 and still in progress when Benjamin fled the Occupation in 1940, The Arcades Project (in German, Das Passagen-Werk) is a monumental ruin, meticulously constructed over the course of thirteen years--"the theater," as Benjamin called it, "of all my struggles and all my ideas."
Focusing on the arcades of nineteenth-century Paris-glass-roofed rows of shops that were early centers of consumerism--Benjamin presents a montage of quotations from, and reflections on, hundreds of published sources, arranging them…