Between Part and Whole: Benjamin and the Single Trait

Paragraph 32 (3):382-399 (2009)
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Abstract

This text, which is part of a project, ‘Toward a Politics and Poetics of Singularity’, explores the implications of a phrase used more or less simultaneously, although independently, by Walter Benjamin and Sigmund Freud, ‘the single trait’. In his 1962 lectures on the problem of identification, Jacques Lacan focused on this phrase in Freud in order to exemplify the difference between the subject and the signifier. The use of the phrase by Benjamin in his essay on ‘Destiny and Character’ inflects the discussion toward questions of ‘comedy’ and ‘tragedy’, and thereby links the singularity of the signifying process to literary and theatrical forms.

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A Town on Its Knees?AbdouMaliq Simone - 2010 - Theory, Culture and Society 27 (7-8):130-154.

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