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Written by John W. Love, Jr.
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Friday, 29 May 2009 13:28 |
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Last Updated on Thursday, 22 July 2010 16:03 |
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| Susan Sontag once remarked that, in Walter Benjamin's texts, sentences do not seem to generate in the ordinary way; they do not lead gently into one another, and do not create an obvious line of reasoning. Instead, it is as if each sentence "had to say everything, before the inward gaze of total concentration dissolved the subject before his eyes", a style of writing and thinking Sontag calls "freeze-frame baroque." Sontag writes that "his major essays seem to end just in time, before they self-destruct." |
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