El concepto de historia en walter benjamin: el desencantamiento de la idea de progreso

The text, On the Concept of History, written in XVIII fragments and two appendices, develops Benjamin's reflections around the theme of history where several categories emerge: historicism, historical materialism, messianism, current time, progress, continuity. It has, at first sight, a backgro...

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Autores:
Bautista Roa, Milton Adolfo
Tipo de recurso:
Fecha de publicación:
2020
Institución:
Universidad Santo Tomás
Repositorio:
Universidad Santo Tomás
Idioma:
spa
OAI Identifier:
oai:repository.usta.edu.co:11634/29647
Acceso en línea:
http://revistas.ustatunja.edu.co/index.php/qdisputatae/article/view/2013
http://hdl.handle.net/11634/29647
Palabra clave:
History
progress
messianism
commemoration
Historia
progreso
mesianismo
conmemoración
Histoire
progrès
messianisme
commémoration
História
progresso
messianismo
comemoração
Rights
License
Derechos de autor 2020 Quaestiones Disputatae: temas en debate
Description
Summary:The text, On the Concept of History, written in XVIII fragments and two appendices, develops Benjamin's reflections around the theme of history where several categories emerge: historicism, historical materialism, messianism, current time, progress, continuity. It has, at first sight, a background that Benjamin's commentators insist on: the sacred and the profane, where these two categories are mixed, intertwined, dialectically interpenetrated. We could approach Walter's thought in his writing from the following thesis: historical materialism unveils the true history behind the illusion of progress, either as philosophical messianism or as enlightened revolution, where another look at time and space lies, where precisely the victims, the silenced of history, appear. Walter Benjamin's theses on the concept of history proclaim a disenchantment with the enlightened idea of progress. Concepts such as "weak messianic force" and "commemoration" are concepts that are repeatedly insisted upon as the basis for Benjamin's reading of another way of seeing the philosophy of history.