A new translation of philosopher Walter Benjamin's work as it pertains
to his famous essay, The Storyteller, this collection includes short
stories, book reviews, parables, and as a selection of writings by other
authors who had an influence on Benjamin's work.
"The Storyteller" is one of Walter Benjamin's most important essays, a
beautiful and suggestive meditation on the relation between narrative
form, social life, and individual existence--and the product of at least
a decade's work. What might be called the story of The Storyteller
Essays starts in 1926, with a piece Benjamin wrote about the German
romantic Johann Peter Hebel. It continues in a series of short essays,
book reviews, short stories, parables, and even radio shows for
children. This collection brings them all together to give readers a new
appreciation of how Benjamin's thinking changed and ripened over time,
while including several key readings of his own--texts by his
contemporaries Ernst Bloch and Georg Lukács; by Paul Valéry; and by
Herodotus and Montaigne. Finally, to bring things around, there are
three short stories by "the incomparable Hebel" with whom the whole
intellectual adventure began.