Hobohemia and the crucifixion machine : rival images of a new world in 1930s Vancouver

In this short excerpt, written sometime between 1944 and 1947, Theodor Adorno registers the tragic effects of fifteen years of global depression and war with a horrifying revision of Walter Benjamin’s pre-war dream about the possibility of revolutionary change. The beggar, whose disappearance Benjam...

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Autores:
Tipo de recurso:
Book
Fecha de publicación:
2014
Institución:
Universidad de Bogotá Jorge Tadeo Lozano
Repositorio:
Expeditio: repositorio UTadeo
Idioma:
eng
OAI Identifier:
oai:expeditiorepositorio.utadeo.edu.co:20.500.12010/15791
Acceso en línea:
https://www.aupress.ca/app/uploads/120215_99Z_McCallum_2014-Hobohemia_and_the_Crucifixion_Machine.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12010/15791
Palabra clave:
Hobohemia
Crucifixion machine
Asistencia pública
Columbia Británica -- Condiciones económicas
Crisis económica, 1929 -- Columbia Británica
Rights
License
Abierto (Texto Completo)
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oai_identifier_str oai:expeditiorepositorio.utadeo.edu.co:20.500.12010/15791
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dc.title.spa.fl_str_mv Hobohemia and the crucifixion machine : rival images of a new world in 1930s Vancouver
title Hobohemia and the crucifixion machine : rival images of a new world in 1930s Vancouver
spellingShingle Hobohemia and the crucifixion machine : rival images of a new world in 1930s Vancouver
Hobohemia
Crucifixion machine
Asistencia pública
Columbia Británica -- Condiciones económicas
Crisis económica, 1929 -- Columbia Británica
title_short Hobohemia and the crucifixion machine : rival images of a new world in 1930s Vancouver
title_full Hobohemia and the crucifixion machine : rival images of a new world in 1930s Vancouver
title_fullStr Hobohemia and the crucifixion machine : rival images of a new world in 1930s Vancouver
title_full_unstemmed Hobohemia and the crucifixion machine : rival images of a new world in 1930s Vancouver
title_sort Hobohemia and the crucifixion machine : rival images of a new world in 1930s Vancouver
dc.subject.spa.fl_str_mv Hobohemia
Crucifixion machine
topic Hobohemia
Crucifixion machine
Asistencia pública
Columbia Británica -- Condiciones económicas
Crisis económica, 1929 -- Columbia Británica
dc.subject.lemb.spa.fl_str_mv Asistencia pública
Columbia Británica -- Condiciones económicas
Crisis económica, 1929 -- Columbia Británica
description In this short excerpt, written sometime between 1944 and 1947, Theodor Adorno registers the tragic effects of fifteen years of global depression and war with a horrifying revision of Walter Benjamin’s pre-war dream about the possibility of revolutionary change. The beggar, whose disappearance Benjamin had imagined as a sign of the disappearance of all classes, becomes in Adorno’s wilful misreading a much more complicated figure. In Adorno’s rendering, because the beggar is the target of the violence that must first be done so that myth can achieve the desired result, sleep comes to the child only by first remembering and then forgetting the hurts inflicted upon the homeless man in the shadows. This process is made all the easier by articulat- ing the man’s poverty with the appearances of racial inferiority.2 Effectively effaced and made an abstract figure, yet still all too human in his ability to experience pain, Adorno’s beggar is necessary to the functioning of the whole, not because he can work but because he can suffer, allowing the rest of us to remember, and then forget, and then sleep. Adorno manages to find a kernel of utopian content in this nursery rhyme by proposing that the bourgeois dream of physically expelling each and every beggar from the whole would, in reality, “make good everything that was ever done to him and can never be made good.”3 In his mind, justice for each individual historical act of persecution is an impossible goal since the very act of calculating an equivalent punishment would make one “the mouthpiece, against a bad world, of one even worse.”4 Nonetheless, Adorno still imagines that the beggar could inflict severe damage by accepting his removal from “civilization,” thereby allowing its citizens to stamp out within themselves the only remaining “portion of nature” yet to succumb to rationalization. In this logic, it is only outside of this society — now left alone with its dialectic of enlightenment, where Hitler or Hollywood represented the only choice that remained — that the abject beggar finally “glimpses peace without the wretchedness of others”: “Have now peaceful mind, beggar home shall find.” Regrettably, in our present context, Adorno’s final question — “Would not the beggar, driven out of the gate of civilization, find refuge in his home- land, freed from exile on earth?” — originates in a kind of curiosity about the possibilities of a utopia that most Canadian historians have learned to leave behind, an occasional object of, but not a guide to, critical historical practice. I offer in this book’s opening chapters an excursus into the beggar’s “homeland,” doing so as something of an antidote to this contemporary his- toriographic departure away from utopia’s long-standing attractions.
publishDate 2014
dc.date.created.none.fl_str_mv 2014
dc.date.accessioned.none.fl_str_mv 2020-11-18T19:20:40Z
dc.date.available.none.fl_str_mv 2020-11-18T19:20:40Z
dc.type.coar.spa.fl_str_mv http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_2f33
format http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_2f33
dc.identifier.isbn.none.fl_str_mv 978-1-926836-29-4
dc.identifier.other.none.fl_str_mv
https://www.aupress.ca/app/uploads/120215_99Z_McCallum_2014-Hobohemia_and_the_Crucifixion_Machine.pdf
dc.identifier.uri.none.fl_str_mv http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12010/15791
dc.identifier.doi.none.fl_str_mv
identifier_str_mv 978-1-926836-29-4

url https://www.aupress.ca/app/uploads/120215_99Z_McCallum_2014-Hobohemia_and_the_Crucifixion_Machine.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12010/15791
dc.language.iso.spa.fl_str_mv eng
language eng
dc.rights.coar.fl_str_mv http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
dc.rights.local.spa.fl_str_mv Abierto (Texto Completo)
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rights_invalid_str_mv Abierto (Texto Completo)
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dc.format.extent.spa.fl_str_mv 332 páginas
dc.format.mimetype.spa.fl_str_mv application/pdf
dc.publisher.spa.fl_str_mv AU Press
institution Universidad de Bogotá Jorge Tadeo Lozano
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spelling 2020-11-18T19:20:40Z2020-11-18T19:20:40Z2014978-1-926836-29-4https://www.aupress.ca/app/uploads/120215_99Z_McCallum_2014-Hobohemia_and_the_Crucifixion_Machine.pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12010/15791In this short excerpt, written sometime between 1944 and 1947, Theodor Adorno registers the tragic effects of fifteen years of global depression and war with a horrifying revision of Walter Benjamin’s pre-war dream about the possibility of revolutionary change. The beggar, whose disappearance Benjamin had imagined as a sign of the disappearance of all classes, becomes in Adorno’s wilful misreading a much more complicated figure. In Adorno’s rendering, because the beggar is the target of the violence that must first be done so that myth can achieve the desired result, sleep comes to the child only by first remembering and then forgetting the hurts inflicted upon the homeless man in the shadows. This process is made all the easier by articulat- ing the man’s poverty with the appearances of racial inferiority.2 Effectively effaced and made an abstract figure, yet still all too human in his ability to experience pain, Adorno’s beggar is necessary to the functioning of the whole, not because he can work but because he can suffer, allowing the rest of us to remember, and then forget, and then sleep. Adorno manages to find a kernel of utopian content in this nursery rhyme by proposing that the bourgeois dream of physically expelling each and every beggar from the whole would, in reality, “make good everything that was ever done to him and can never be made good.”3 In his mind, justice for each individual historical act of persecution is an impossible goal since the very act of calculating an equivalent punishment would make one “the mouthpiece, against a bad world, of one even worse.”4 Nonetheless, Adorno still imagines that the beggar could inflict severe damage by accepting his removal from “civilization,” thereby allowing its citizens to stamp out within themselves the only remaining “portion of nature” yet to succumb to rationalization. In this logic, it is only outside of this society — now left alone with its dialectic of enlightenment, where Hitler or Hollywood represented the only choice that remained — that the abject beggar finally “glimpses peace without the wretchedness of others”: “Have now peaceful mind, beggar home shall find.” Regrettably, in our present context, Adorno’s final question — “Would not the beggar, driven out of the gate of civilization, find refuge in his home- land, freed from exile on earth?” — originates in a kind of curiosity about the possibilities of a utopia that most Canadian historians have learned to leave behind, an occasional object of, but not a guide to, critical historical practice. I offer in this book’s opening chapters an excursus into the beggar’s “homeland,” doing so as something of an antidote to this contemporary his- toriographic departure away from utopia’s long-standing attractions.332 páginasapplication/pdfengAU PressHobohemiaCrucifixion machineAsistencia públicaColumbia Británica -- Condiciones económicasCrisis económica, 1929 -- Columbia BritánicaHobohemia and the crucifixion machine : rival images of a new world in 1930s VancouverAbierto (Texto Completo)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_2f33McCallum, ToddORIGINALACFrOgBK9S202IW0NP6Nv0qHMytCk6oNEC3bAXec0S8yJ7Ow6HsXmKelksn7VtLL_4xflE7R6974CzIa70WhXfCk_P8bhgBvH6PHARAAiCVng_ZcpLHVk14wJ4k38ox9-FlAWShGFitha5UA0Xhv.pdfACFrOgBK9S202IW0NP6Nv0qHMytCk6oNEC3bAXec0S8yJ7Ow6HsXmKelksn7VtLL_4xflE7R6974CzIa70WhXfCk_P8bhgBvH6PHARAAiCVng_ZcpLHVk14wJ4k38ox9-FlAWShGFitha5UA0Xhv.pdfVer libroapplication/pdf26342207https://expeditiorepositorio.utadeo.edu.co/bitstream/20.500.12010/15791/1/ACFrOgBK9S202IW0NP6Nv0qHMytCk6oNEC3bAXec0S8yJ7Ow6HsXmKelksn7VtLL_4xflE7R6974CzIa70WhXfCk_P8bhgBvH6PHARAAiCVng_ZcpLHVk14wJ4k38ox9-FlAWShGFitha5UA0Xhv.pdf7516d933cb27585d26891093a78903c4MD51open accessLICENSElicense.txtlicense.txttext/plain; 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