No Poem Is Intended for the Reader: Walter Benjamin Against the Communication Model of Language
An Opening That Sounds Impossible Walter Benjamin's The Task of the Translator (1923) occupies a curious place in twentieth-century thought. Written before language became a central problem in philosophy, the essay nevertheless raises questions that would later become central to this intellectual turn. Although Benjamin's immediate concern is translation, his opening pages challenge something much broader: the assumption that language is fundamentally a vehicle for transmitting meanings from one mind to another. He begins with a statement that seems almost designed to provoke disbelief: "No poem is intended for the reader, no picture for the beholder, no symphony for the listener." At first glance, the claim appears absurd. Surely poems are written for readers. Surely paintings are made to be seen. Surely translations exist to help those who cannot read the original. Benjamin's answer is a surprising no. These opening lines are not merely a reflection...