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Modes of Intention and the Problem of the “Same Object”: Benjamin Between Linguistic Tradition and Structural Critique

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The words Brot and pain "intend" the same object, but the modes of this intention are not the same. It is owing to these modes that the word Brot means something different to a German than the word pain to a Frenchman, that these words are not interchangeable for them, that, in fact, they strive to exclude each other. As to the intended object, however, the two words mean the very same thing. —     - Walter Benjamin, The task of the translator Introduction “The words Brot and pain ‘intend’ the same object, but the modes of this intention are not the same…” (Benjamin, 2000, p. 258). The apparent simplicity of this formulation conceals a decisive assumption about language: that translation operates on a shared object whose identity remains intact across linguistic systems. Meaning is thereby divided between what is referred to and the manner in which it is referred to. Yet this distinction is not self-evident. What sustains this symmetry is less transparent than i...

Hölderlin and the Foreign: Why Walter Benjamin Thought Great Poets Make Better Translators

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Thesis Hölderlin's translations of Sophocles were long regarded as strange, defective, or even unreadable because they violated conventional expectations of fluency. Walter Benjamin's theory of translation allows us to see these translations differently. Rather than domesticating Greek tragedy into smooth German, Hölderlin preserved its alterity and thereby revealed a deeper purpose of translation: not merely the transfer of information, but the encounter between languages themselves. A Translator Accused of Failure Friedrich Hölderlin's translations of Sophocles had a strange fate. Today Hölderlin occupies an undisputed place among the major poets of the German tradition. Yet his versions of Antigone and Oedipus Tyrannus bewildered many of his contemporaries. Readers complained that the language sounded awkward, unnatural, and at times almost incomprehensible. What should have been a bridge between Greek tragedy and German literature appeared instead as an obstacle...

What Did Walter Benjamin Mean by “Translation Is a Form”?

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Introduction Walter Benjamin's essay The Task of the Translator opens with a deceptively simple statement: “Übersetzung ist eine Form” — “translation is a form.” The remark appears almost in passing, yet it provides the key to the entire essay. Benjamin is not merely proposing a new method for translators. He is challenging the assumptions that have traditionally governed reflection on translation itself. Most theories begin from the premise that a translation exists to transmit meaning from one language to another. Benjamin proceeds in the opposite direction. Translation, he argues, cannot be understood primarily in terms of communication, reproduction, or equivalence. It belongs instead to the historical life of languages and literary works. The translator's task is not to produce a copy of an original text but to participate in a process through which languages disclose their deeper affinity with one another. By calling translation a “form,” Benjamin does not mean a p...

Can a False Report Be Legally Truthful? Peirce, Journalism, and the Pursuit of Knowledge

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Introduction: A Legal and Philosophical Paradox Can a false report be  faithful ? At first glance, the question appears self-contradictory. If a newspaper publishes inaccurate information, common sense suggests that the report cannot be true. Yet democratic legal systems have long recognized a distinction between factual error and irresponsible reporting. Under certain circumstances, journalists may receive legal protection even when parts of their reporting later prove incorrect. This distinction rests on a broader insight about the nature of knowledge itself. Reporters rarely observe every event they describe firsthand. Instead, they reconstruct what happened from documents, photographs, testimony, official records, and other forms of evidence. The challenge is not simply to discover the truth but to investigate it under conditions of uncertainty. More than a century before contemporary debates about media responsibility, Charles Sanders Peirce developed a theory of inqui...

If Language Is Not Substance, What Does Translation Transfer? Saussure and Benjamin in Dialogue

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“Übersetzung ist eine Form” (translation is a form) — Walter Benjamin, The Task of the Translator “La langue est une forme et non une substance” (language itself is a form, not a substance) — Ferdinand de Saussure, Course in General Linguistics Introduction Walter Benjamin's The Task of the Translator opens with a claim that immediately unsettles ordinary assumptions about art and literature: “No poem is intended for the reader, no picture for the beholder, no symphony for the listener.” Taken literally, the statement appears implausible. Poems are written to be read, paintings to be seen, and music to be heard. Yet Benjamin refuses this familiar picture. His concern is not empirical but structural: not who constitutes the ideal receiver, but what a work of art is. Translation is commonly understood as a means of making a text accessible to those unable to read the original. Yet Benjamin suspends this assumption as well. The focus shifts from the audience to the work...