258
See also: Plato 50–55 ■ Karl Marx 196–203 ■ Theodor Adorno 266–67 ■
Roland Barthes 290–91
T
he German philosopher
Walter Benjamin was an
affiliate of the Frankfurt
School, a group of neo-Marxist
social theorists who explored the
significance of mass culture and
communication. Benjamin was also
fascinated by the techniques of film
and literature, and his 1926 essay
One-Way Street is an experiment in
literary construction. It is a
collection of observations—
intellectual and empirical—that
apparently occur to him as he walks
down an imaginary city street.
In the essay Benjamin does not
set out a grand theory. Instead
he wants to surprise us with ideas,
in the same way that we might be
surprised by something catching
our eye while on a walk. Toward
the end of the essay, he says that
“Quotations in my work are like
wayside robbers who leap out,
brandishing weapons, and relieve
the idler of his certainty.”
Illuminating love
The idea that the only way of
knowing a person is to love them
hopelessly appears in the middle of
the essay, under the heading “Arc
Lamp.” In a flare of light, Benjamin
pauses and thinks just this, and no
more—the essay moves immediately
afterward to a new section. We are
forced to guess what he means. Is
he saying that knowledge arises
out of love? Or that it is only when
we stop hoping for some outcome
that we can clearly see the beloved?
We cannot know. All we can do is
walk down the street alongside
Benjamin, experiencing the flare of
light of these passing thoughts. ■
THE ONLY WAY OF
KNOWING A PERSON
IS TO LOVE THEM
WITHOUT HOPE
WALTER BENJAMIN (1892–1940)
IN CONTEXT
BRANCH
Ethics
APPROACH
Frankfurt School
BEFORE
c.380 BCE Plato writes his
Symposium, considered the
first sustained philosophical
account of love.
1863 The French writer
Charles Baudelaire explores
the idea of the flâneur, the
“person who walks the city to
experience it.”
AFTER
1955 Guy Debord establishes
psychogeography, the study
of the effects of geography
on an individual’s emotions
and behavior.
1971 Italian novelist
Italo Calvino explores the
relationships between
cities and signs in his book
Invisible Cities.
The construction of life
currently lies far more in
the hands of facts than
of convictions.
Walter Benjamin