Divine Violence Suffered: Another Reading of Walter Benjamin’s Toward the Critique of Violence

Interdisciplinary Journal for Religion and Transformation in Contemporar y Society 10 (10 (2024)):579–593 (2024)
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Abstract

Benjamin’s essay Toward the Critique of Violence has often irritated readers. This is even more true of his concept of divine violence, which is defined as “law-annihilating” and goes against legally sanctioned state sovereignty. In this paper, I present a new reading of both Benjamin’s essay and divine violence. Against an apocalyptic tendency of Benjamin, I argue that divine violence can only be an instrument of justice if it is understood as violence suffered rather than perpetrated. This is especially the case where people suffer persecution – imprisonment, torture, death – as a result of nonviolent resistance to an oppressive political regime. Only where such resistant suffering occurs, can violence properly be called divine. Only then does it offer a perspective beyond the never-ending atrocities of human history.

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2025-03-23

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Sandra Lehmann
University of Vienna

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References found in this work

Toward the critique of violence: a critical edition.Walter Benjamin - 2019 - Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. Edited by Peter D. Fenves & Julia Ng.
Origin of the German Trauerspiel.Walter Benjamin - 2018 - Harvard University Press.
Force of law: the metaphysical foundation of authority.Jacques Derrida - 1992 - In Drucilla Cornell, Michel Rosenfeld & David Carlson, Deconstruction and the Possibility of Justice. New York: Routledge.
Levinas' 'Totality and infinity'.William Large - 2015 - London: Bloomsbury Academic.

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