- Page 2: THE ARCADES PROJECT
- Page 6 and 7: CONTENTS T"anslators' Foreword Expo
- Page 10 and 11: Translators' Foreword The materials
- Page 13 and 14: Of course, many readers will concur
- Page 15: 1ranslation 1ranslation duties for
- Page 21 and 22: collaboration for which Girardin, i
- Page 23 and 24: 00 Fashion: "Madam Death! Madam Dea
- Page 25: V. Baudelaire, Baudelaire, or the S
- Page 30: mann and its manifest expression in
- Page 33: industry opens the 1798 exhibition.
- Page 37 and 38: the senses that one cannot be surpr
- Page 39 and 40: II II The flowery realm of decorati
- Page 41: write throughout all eternity-at a
- Page 50 and 51: Glass roof and iron girders, Passag
- Page 52: an an area area bounded bounded by
- Page 57 and 58: In 1825, opening of the "Passages D
- Page 60:
public halls will be located on the
- Page 64:
The Passage de l'Opera, 1822-1823.
- Page 76 and 77:
debunked, debunked, / Had Had he he
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of the grande dame. Yet fashion is
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Des d:lmesrl'un demi·montle J mms
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this tiny spot on the earth's surfa
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III Silent it will be nonetheless!-
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'" '" '" ance ance of vaults and un
- Page 128:
froy writes: ""He thus inscribes hi
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E [Haussmannization, [Haussmannizat
- Page 140:
I-Iaussmann and the Chamber of Depu
- Page 148 and 149:
'-If we had to define, in a word, w
- Page 150:
himself himself more more susceptib
- Page 159 and 160:
Basse-du-Rampart. Basse-du-Rampart.
- Page 164 and 165:
Paris of the past three centuries.
- Page 169 and 170:
'The complicated construction (out
- Page 171 and 172:
"Railroad tracks;' with the peculia
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form are, as it were, more homogene
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speak, 'concealed;" This last point
- Page 177 and 178:
people could raise themselves, as f
- Page 179 and 180:
La Casse-tete-omanie, ou La Fureur
- Page 181 and 182:
1ne Palais de l'lndustrie at the wo
- Page 183 and 184:
sort. ""Labrouste . . . in 1868, .
- Page 185 and 186:
marked the triumph of exposed ironw
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alded. Naturally, one can say that
- Page 189 and 190:
As is sonletimes the case with very
- Page 191 and 192:
around the world, for all nations h
- Page 193 and 194:
lows over a streetcorner. The best
- Page 195 and 196:
palace erected by Formige. It is ch
- Page 197 and 198:
'&:! fetish character of the commo
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decisive impetus, within this perio
- Page 201 and 202:
into the midst of these horrible pl
- Page 203 and 204:
dustrial credit.-that is to say, cr
- Page 205 and 206:
wrote . .. Prince Albert to his mot
- Page 207 and 208:
Clairville and Jules Cordier, Le Pa
- Page 209 and 210:
long eagerness: it approaches, alwa
- Page 211 and 212:
2§; contact with the air or the h
- Page 213 and 214:
le tomb . ... But what appalled me
- Page 215 and 216:
o o '" "Les Ev€mements, les insti
- Page 217 and 218:
8 N cisely in this, one can recogni
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exactly how the sanguine and the ne
- Page 221 and 222:
hythm of perception and experience
- Page 223 and 224:
00 o "" societies, the need to accu
- Page 225 and 226:
cates: "It ... is . . . certain tha
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I [The Interior, The Trace] "In 183
- Page 229 and 230:
.. whether the fireplace was there
- Page 231 and 232:
.. Maurice Barres has characterized
- Page 233 and 234:
.. nate. . . . The same picture can
- Page 235 and 236:
.. than he sees through the semblan
- Page 237 and 238:
.. have, up to now, borrowed only t
- Page 239 and 240:
". ed. Landshut and Mayer (Leipzig
- Page 241 and 242:
.. is tic manifestations: "I have b
- Page 243 and 244:
J [Baudelaire] For it pleases me, a
- Page 245 and 246:
Have pity on them! Pity! When on th
- Page 247 and 248:
. 1 ... TI,e Pant-Neuf. Etching by
- Page 249 and 250:
conduded ? There never was such a s
- Page 251 and 252:
the poet when he has to describe .
- Page 253 and 254:
Baudelaire in L'Art philosophique,"
- Page 255 and 256:
In " L'Oeuvre et la vie d'Eugene De
- Page 257 and 258:
Theophile Gautier, 1854·1855. Phot
- Page 259 and 260:
melting of rumhling glaciers; her n
- Page 261 and 262:
'"The dandy, Baudelaire has said, '
- Page 263 and 264:
mistress betrays you, of being able
- Page 265 and 266:
o en '" ner.-Brunetiere arrived at
- Page 267 and 268:
ing the great epochs of urban life,
- Page 269 and 270:
Gide, Preface to Charles Baudelaire
- Page 271 and 272:
Lemaitre observes that Baudelaire r
- Page 273 and 274:
According to Champfleury, Baudelair
- Page 275 and 276:
"The hypothesis of Baudelaire s P.
- Page 277 and 278:
Never, according to this witness, .
- Page 279 and 280:
Maire writes (p. 417) that the inco
- Page 282 and 283:
Ours is an age of gaiety and distru
- Page 284 and 285:
'Nachtgedanken" , by Goethe: "'I pi
- Page 286 and 287:
· . . what would become of poetry
- Page 288 and 289:
The reviews by d' Aurevilly and As
- Page 290 and 291:
excuses a man over thirty who foist
- Page 292 and 293:
In Honfleur, he had hung two painti
- Page 294 and 295:
Pontmartin in his critique of the p
- Page 296 and 297:
presses . . . . All machinery is sa
- Page 298 and 299:
The banquets organized by Philoxene
- Page 300 and 301:
little scraps of men-that is, to bu
- Page 302 and 303:
"'The life of Baudelaire is a deser
- Page 304 and 305:
Meryon and Baudelaire were born in
- Page 306 and 307:
"Voltaire jests about our inunortal
- Page 308 and 309:
the most priceless material, is fir
- Page 310 and 311:
On a sheet with the sketch of a fem
- Page 312 and 313:
Pierre de Fayis. "La Fanfarlo' appe
- Page 314 and 315:
Conclusion of the 'Salon de 1845"":
- Page 316 and 317:
someone of an outlandish profession
- Page 318 and 319:
On Joseph de Maistre: "To the prete
- Page 320 and 321:
possessing great vigor and marvelou
- Page 322 and 323:
quotes, in connection with this, Ba
- Page 324 and 325:
to amuse myself, whether such a pro
- Page 326 and 327:
May 1852: (."Les Limbes : intimate
- Page 328 and 329:
July 10, 1861, on the planned de lu
- Page 330 and 331:
vol. 2, pp. 639, 641-642. 25°_In t
- Page 332 and 333:
A decisive line for the comparison
- Page 334 and 335:
Apropos of' "Harmonie du soil''' an
- Page 336 and 337:
Sainte-Beuve's characterization of
- Page 338 and 339:
which creeps into the life of artis
- Page 340 and 341:
ated from the antique world, as fro
- Page 342 and 343:
ecause of the greedy Irony which in
- Page 344 and 345:
have been under the compulsion of r
- Page 346 and 347:
to the doctrine of German Idealism
- Page 348 and 349:
conjured by "Le Soleil;' no less th
- Page 350 and 351:
The elaborate theorems with which t
- Page 352 and 353:
masses on its public. Particularly
- Page 354 and 355:
What concerned Baudelaire was not m
- Page 356 and 357:
his life, was incapable of developi
- Page 358 and 359:
4"Of course, Marx and Engels ironiz
- Page 360 and 361:
praiseworthy in their very excessiv
- Page 362 and 363:
Itis a very specific experience tha
- Page 364 and 365:
work in the latter are different so
- Page 366 and 367:
Baudelaire builds stanzas where it
- Page 368 and 369:
L'Etemifif par ieJ astreJ. Compare
- Page 370 and 371:
If "Le Cn'puscule du matin" opens w
- Page 372 and 373:
Earthquakes rumhle in the helly of
- Page 374 and 375:
ined with this passage from Marx, p
- Page 376 and 377:
exploited, we would be spared the i
- Page 378 and 379:
Lamartine's industrial Christ reapp
- Page 380 and 381:
The figure of the poet in "Benedict
- Page 382 and 383:
In the poetry of Baudelaire, notwit
- Page 384 and 385:
the commodity delights, according t
- Page 386 and 387:
merchandise now gathers around it t
- Page 388 and 389:
our time and that of the time of Lu
- Page 390 and 391:
fact that a purely philological com
- Page 392 and 393:
On "the metaphysics of the agent pr
- Page 394 and 395:
Hermann Wendel !.!.Jules Valles," D
- Page 396 and 397:
ourgeoisie, and ending with the peo
- Page 398 and 399:
pIe, for themselves and their partn
- Page 400 and 401:
houses abutted with one yard after
- Page 402 and 403:
Regarding spleen. Blanqui to Lacamb
- Page 404 and 405:
primacy over history. The facts bec
- Page 406 and 407:
It is not only that the forms of ap
- Page 408 and 409:
primordial passions, fears, and ima
- Page 410 and 411:
Happy are they who can feel the bea
- Page 412 and 413:
also Revolution and war, like a fev
- Page 414 and 415:
F Maynard, "L'Avenir est beau," in
- Page 416 and 417:
stairways in well-organized houses
- Page 418 and 419:
from what is meant by those who spe
- Page 420 and 421:
L [Dream House, Museum, Spa] The ge
- Page 422 and 423:
e saturated with the past: the muse
- Page 424 and 425:
structing private residential dwell
- Page 426 and 427:
less putrefied naked bodies of both
- Page 428 and 429:
The sewers of Paris, 1861-1862. Pho
- Page 430 and 431:
ground and sometimes set leaning to
- Page 432 and 433:
An intoxication comes over the man
- Page 434 and 435:
winks at the flaneur: What do you t
- Page 436 and 437:
properly sacred ground of flilnerie
- Page 438 and 439:
sions, for balls and concerts, alth
- Page 440 and 441:
advances the needle on a transparen
- Page 442 and 443:
paving stones that are being baked
- Page 444 and 445:
Remarkable distinction between Hane
- Page 446 and 447:
Diderot's (,'How beautiful the stre
- Page 448 and 449:
A Paris omnibus. Lithograph by Hono
- Page 450 and 451:
(This preface appeared-presumably a
- Page 452 and 453:
oots or shoes, a farmer that he is
- Page 454 and 455:
K.racauer writes that "the boulevar
- Page 456 and 457:
Chapter 2, "Physiognomie de la rue,
- Page 458 and 459:
mont P,"omenades litteraires, secon
- Page 460 and 461:
what is below man distinguishes thr
- Page 462 and 463:
use value available to a general an
- Page 464 and 465:
Regarding the intoxication of empat
- Page 466 and 467:
Tissot, in justifying his proposal
- Page 468 and 469:
Beginning of Rousseau's Second Prom
- Page 470 and 471:
The most characteristic building pr
- Page 472 and 473:
A page of BenJamin's manuscript, sh
- Page 474 and 475:
"In the windswept stairways of the
- Page 476 and 477:
A central problem of historical mat
- Page 478 and 479:
y the images that are synchronic wi
- Page 480 and 481:
enascences adopted as models. For t
- Page 482 and 483:
holds for law and religion holds fo
- Page 484 and 485:
'overcome' the official Catholic re
- Page 486 and 487:
Telescoping of the past through the
- Page 488 and 489:
Scientific method is distinguished
- Page 490 and 491:
If the object of history is to be b
- Page 492 and 493:
mathematical studies-so unsteady in
- Page 494 and 495:
which had suffered in a previous im
- Page 496 and 497:
also an increase in men's concern f
- Page 498 and 499:
should be adopted." J. Joubert, Oeu
- Page 500 and 501:
so-called historical materialism th
- Page 502 and 503:
ers except the one for whom it wait
- Page 504 and 505:
o [Prostitution, Gambling] Love is
- Page 506 and 507:
A gallery of the Palais-Royal. From
- Page 508 and 509:
ville, to make sure he will be reco
- Page 510 and 511:
Talma, Talleyrand, Rossini, Balzac"
- Page 512 and 513:
cabriolets for rent in the Palais d
- Page 514 and 515:
a bad game,' they say. They find fa
- Page 516 and 517:
elsewhere, the investigations of th
- Page 518 and 519:
On the floor of the Stock Exchange,
- Page 520 and 521:
Lecomte on the fashion corresponden
- Page 522 and 523:
In the sixteenth section of Baudela
- Page 524 and 525:
and young girls with no work would
- Page 526 and 527:
sion to fertilize and give birth to
- Page 528 and 529:
independent of the others-to summon
- Page 530 and 531:
only at opening time." Balzac, La P
- Page 532 and 533:
and their earliest green glow at du
- Page 534 and 535:
ennes; the Faubourg Saint-Marceau w
- Page 536 and 537:
'"I know nothing more ridiculous an
- Page 538 and 539:
""The way the cutups go to make fac
- Page 540 and 541:
ery." Victor Hugo, Oeu.vres cornple
- Page 542 and 543:
[Panorama] Does anyone still want t
- Page 544 and 545:
A panorama under construction, in a
- Page 546 and 547:
The multiple deployment of figures
- Page 548 and 549:
have expected that Jerusalem and At
- Page 550 and 551:
knight kneels before his lady while
- Page 552 and 553:
R [Mirrors] The way mirrors bring t
- Page 554 and 555:
fortune, and whereas there is scarc
- Page 556 and 557:
Berlin Arcade, there is no grass gr
- Page 558 and 559:
s [Painting, Jugendstil, Novelty] T
- Page 560 and 561:
higher concreteness, redemption of
- Page 562 and 563:
identity, we can transport ourselve
- Page 564 and 565:
triumphs is the aquarium, the green
- Page 566 and 567:
Delvau speaks? at one point? of the
- Page 568 and 569:
Influence of the processes of techn
- Page 570 and 571:
"The rapid overpopulation of the ca
- Page 572 and 573:
The idea of eternal return in Zarat
- Page 574 and 575:
them as if over electrical wires!'
- Page 576 and 577:
in those peculiar places, railway s
- Page 578 and 579:
"During this same period, the amoun
- Page 580 and 581:
ing prosaic and ghostly illuminatio
- Page 582 and 583:
and they soon found two highly repu
- Page 584 and 585:
A la petite vertu" , 1769: The poor
- Page 586 and 587:
u [Saint-Simon, Railroads] I.'Chara
- Page 588 and 589:
'loOn August 27, 1817, the steamshi
- Page 590 and 591:
importance, from the point of view
- Page 592 and 593:
friends and acquaintances . ... He
- Page 594 and 595:
the emergence of' the Liberal Empir
- Page 596 and 597:
On Saint-Simon's idea of progress (
- Page 598 and 599:
"0 Poets! You have eyes, but you do
- Page 600 and 601:
"In 1852 the brothers Pereire, two
- Page 602 and 603:
that of the word . ... They opened
- Page 604 and 605:
follies ofM€milmontant, the bizar
- Page 606 and 607:
happens when several people have to
- Page 608 and 609:
this same text with reference to Sa
- Page 610 and 611:
Jules Mercier, " Dieu nous Ie rendr
- Page 612 and 613:
The Saint-Simonians looked for a fe
- Page 614 and 615:
wake of these organic ages, two cri
- Page 616 and 617:
Ledoux, Temple de Memoire (House of
- Page 618 and 619:
v [Conspiracies, Compagnonnage] ·"
- Page 620 and 621:
mund Englander, Geschichte der Jran
- Page 622 and 623:
La Hodde also helping himself from
- Page 624 and 625:
"The Independents had their secret
- Page 626 and 627:
The Societe des Droits de l'Homme
- Page 628 and 629:
trades. Common, as well, are earrin
- Page 630 and 631:
sans in Paris for the Prussian gove
- Page 632 and 633:
conspiracy of hankers, an office ma
- Page 634 and 635:
la boh?mw." Karl Marx Der achtzehnt
- Page 636 and 637:
een), which last would have the rig
- Page 638 and 639:
L'Esprit des betes (Paris, 1862),
- Page 640 and 641:
than he earns as a producer. Laf
- Page 642 and 643:
Fourier's point of departure: the r
- Page 644 and 645:
milieu in whieh such ideas flourish
- Page 646 and 647:
'The American hoax,' he declares, '
- Page 648 and 649:
some careful and intelligent hand d
- Page 650 and 651:
Fourier's long-tailed men became th
- Page 652 and 653:
having before it more than 300 year
- Page 654 and 655:
extreme idyllic of Fourier. Les ext
- Page 656 and 657:
the weight of the fruit to drop bel
- Page 658 and 659:
"The phalanstery will be an immense
- Page 660 and 661:
""Under the term "opera' I comprehe
- Page 662 and 663:
sort of industrial tournament where
- Page 664 and 665:
Under the heading "Le Garantisme d'
- Page 666 and 667:
x [Marx] The man who buys and sells
- Page 668 and 669:
Point of departure for a critique o
- Page 670 and 671:
Hugo Fischer, Karl Marx u.nd sein V
- Page 672 and 673:
· . . is the most fitting form of
- Page 674 and 675:
ceeds of labor." Marx, Randglossen
- Page 676 and 677:
all the threads of the deliberation
- Page 678 and 679:
earth, the interpretation of intere
- Page 680 and 681:
to the sphere of so-called immutabl
- Page 682 and 683:
measures taken hy the hourgeois sta
- Page 684 and 685:
egoistic man . ... Far from the rig
- Page 686 and 687:
[Photography] Sun, look out for you
- Page 688 and 689:
TI,e photographic reproduction of a
- Page 690 and 691:
tion and, on the other hand, by two
- Page 692 and 693:
tographie au point de vue sociologi
- Page 694 and 695:
Steam-Last word of him who died on
- Page 696 and 697:
the other hand, Fournel condemns th
- Page 698 and 699:
quired of the images forming the ma
- Page 700 and 701:
voyages photographiques. p. 35. Lou
- Page 702 and 703:
advantages to boot especially where
- Page 704 and 705:
ism of his works, but through a mor
- Page 706 and 707:
must be correlated with a well-defi
- Page 708 and 709:
z [The Doll, The Automaton] I was a
- Page 710 and 711:
arming of those charms which allowe
- Page 712 and 713:
Mensonge. "-In the same section, Ba
- Page 714 and 715:
promote unceasingly in the face of
- Page 716 and 717:
days later, from out of this thicke
- Page 718 and 719:
they would then deliver alms person
- Page 720 and 721:
egular intervals, those tremors whi
- Page 722 and 723:
The Convention, organ of the sovere
- Page 724 and 725:
tion. The enemy of the workers had
- Page 726 and 727:
fi'o.ubourien: JOltrno.l de 10. cww
- Page 728 and 729:
a raise of one sou, then the bourge
- Page 730 and 731:
Republique de 1848: Exposition de l
- Page 732 and 733:
Rue 'Fransnonain, Ie 15 avr£l 1834
- Page 734 and 735:
waHhed everywhere, and maintained o
- Page 736 and 737:
Edme Champion: self-made man/l phil
- Page 738 and 739:
Charles Benoist c1aims to fmd in Co
- Page 740 and 741:
· .. rather excessive, and certain
- Page 742 and 743:
Audiganne, is the air of ceremony w
- Page 744 and 745:
truly to defeat him, one would have
- Page 746 and 747:
Marx on Proudhon: i.'The February R
- Page 748 and 749:
the Chamber of Deputies> if he had
- Page 750 and 751:
Fifty thousand workers in the June
- Page 752 and 753:
Nouvelle Nemesis, by Barthelemy (Pa
- Page 754 and 755:
propagated, and maintained the egal
- Page 756 and 757:
unscrupulous speculator and promot.
- Page 758 and 759:
'Monsieur pegnchet."" Marie-Jeanne
- Page 760 and 761:
novelist his own." Paulin Limayrac,
- Page 762 and 763:
Victor Hugo, ca. 1860. Photo by Eti
- Page 764 and 765:
""The multiplication of readers is
- Page 766 and 767:
Castellane point.edly questioned th
- Page 768 and 769:
professional applauders." J. Lucas-
- Page 770 and 771:
the sea for the roar of applause."
- Page 772 and 773:
some other author of his choosing (
- Page 774 and 775:
pp. 219-220, cited in Jean Skerlitc
- Page 776 and 777:
Sue, compared with George Sand: " O
- Page 778 and 779:
political convictions it expressed
- Page 780 and 781:
scorn on gold? To secure this freed
- Page 782 and 783:
Origines des Miserables," in La Rev
- Page 784 and 785:
letters ... is always hawking his o
- Page 786 and 787:
one is arrested, for the privilege
- Page 788 and 789:
Three forms of bohemianism: '"That
- Page 790 and 791:
tint. We did not wish to have any p
- Page 792 and 793:
Le Boheme-was, at first, the organ
- Page 794 and 795:
g--- - [The Stock Exchange, Economi
- Page 796 and 797:
Protestantism . .. did away with th
- Page 798 and 799:
c L'Etrangomanie bfamee) ou D 'Etre
- Page 800 and 801:
meeting as a whole, there are 24,00
- Page 802 and 803:
Raffet undertook lithographic repor
- Page 804 and 805:
served as pretexts. This type of 't
- Page 806 and 807:
een discovered at this tmderground
- Page 808 and 809:
epic. One has not yet understood th
- Page 810 and 811:
German race with the seal of predes
- Page 812 and 813:
'"The Seine seems to exhale the air
- Page 814 and 815:
Saint-Martin. At the crossroads of
- Page 816 and 817:
Bilanz der preussischen Revolution,
- Page 818 and 819:
Idleness seeks to avoid any sort of
- Page 820 and 821:
Habits are the armature of connecte
- Page 822 and 823:
[Anthropological Materialism, Histo
- Page 824 and 825:
just as he was horn to command the
- Page 826 and 827:
Henri Bonchot, La Lit]wgraphie (Par
- Page 828 and 829:
The Fourierist missionary JeanJoume
- Page 830 and 831:
Bahick, deputy of the t.ent.h arron
- Page 832 and 833:
Religion jusionienne) ou Doctrine d
- Page 834 and 835:
ceased to have the character of a p
- Page 836 and 837:
went on to invent as well. Imagine
- Page 838 and 839:
forts will be occupied hy regular a
- Page 842 and 843:
First Sketches Paris Arcades These
- Page 844 and 845:
Everywhere stockings play a starrin
- Page 846 and 847:
commentating naturalist theater of
- Page 848 and 849:
Surrealism-"wave of dreams"-new art
- Page 850 and 851:
Impasse Maubert, formerly d'Arnbois
- Page 852 and 853:
Rachel resided in the Passage Vero-
- Page 854 and 855:
a good subject for wax. Boredom is
- Page 856 and 857:
111e true expressive character of s
- Page 858 and 859:
less is it a question here of etern
- Page 860 and 861:
Duveyrier. Dartois. [ Specialty a
- Page 862 and 863:
The Hower as emblem of sin and its
- Page 864 and 865:
Other names : optical belvedere. I
- Page 866 and 867:
its continually reappearing doctor,
- Page 868 and 869:
envelop his sun, images arise like
- Page 870 and 871:
for the collective. It interprets t
- Page 872 and 873:
again, isn't there a whole world of
- Page 874 and 875:
The grandiose mechanical-materialis
- Page 876 and 877:
Notes on montage in my journal. Per
- Page 878 and 879:
From Der Bazar, illustrated ladies'
- Page 880 and 881:
mation, actualization of the object
- Page 882 and 883:
Hans Kistemaecker, "Die Kleidung de
- Page 884:
EARLY DRAFTS
- Page 887 and 888:
ooth with prices of seats posted-wo
- Page 889 and 890:
with the human nlaterial on the ins
- Page 891 and 892:
viriti, or Miss Daisy: The Journal
- Page 893 and 894:
museum. On the other hand, the reso
- Page 895 and 896:
o 00 00 precipitous. It leads downw
- Page 897 and 898:
want to hear of toys that are bewit
- Page 899 and 900:
dream. But there is also a false li
- Page 901 and 902:
For the rest, people were accustome
- Page 903 and 904:
Walter BCIamin consulting the Grand
- Page 906:
ADDENDA
- Page 909 and 910:
that have left their trace in a tho
- Page 911 and 912:
solves into a legal opposition and
- Page 913 and 914:
[1] (Balzac was the first to speak
- Page 915 and 916:
o '" 0> 1870 Plebiscite: 7,350,000
- Page 917 and 918:
The not-yet-conscious knowledge of
- Page 919 and 920:
Influence of industry on language l
- Page 921 and 922:
Attaclllng to the first appearance
- Page 923 and 924:
00 o '" Efforts to shed light on t
- Page 925 and 926:
(Beginning: description of the pres
- Page 927 and 928:
The now of recognizability is the m
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;': No. 20" 0> Plan of March 1934 +
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No. 22 The sex appeal of the commod
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tory of humanity-as prophecy-has, a
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g '" Parisians on Paris. Pickup, mo
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(fA fa Capricieuse/' lingerie de to
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.". '" m '. .1j G " '" -*I . '(B
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"Dialectics at a Standstill" I "The
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Gesannnelte Schriften-rarely go the
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For the reader endowed with such an
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ment with dmgs. Both represented at
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image of the "eternal retmn of the
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century France-back to what Marx ha
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ture is the expression of the infra
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and, above ail," it feels "this obj
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could employ at any time, For him,
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The Story of Old Benjamin By Lisa F
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were going to cross the border and
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chief, he said: "Oh that. The morni
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oad; through a haze, I see us stand
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Halmah Arendt has "Written about th
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6. Jules Michelet, "Avenir! Avenir!
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17. "The Seven Old Men;' in Baudela
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o '" '" 7. Andre Breton, Niuija, tr
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11. Karl Marx, Capital, vol. 1, tra
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the room-was a spacious, half-open
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Press, 1992), p. 177. Adomo's essay
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II o Z 10. The MilTor of Art: Criti
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8 II Z 71. See Tile Mirror of Art,
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f! m N co N I m '" N 00 0': B 00
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181. See Selected Leiters ofCharies
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251. Ibid., pp. 171, 172, 173. Niet
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325. Baudelaire, Oeuvres completes,
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o 00 '" 392. Baudelaire, Les Fleurs
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454. "Die Modeme hat die Antike wie
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jarnin's phrase, in the second sent
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hashish (GS, vol. 6, p. 564; in Eng
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Frisby (London: Routledge, 1990), p
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co 0> 0> with reference to dle four
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7. Anatole France, The Garden qf Ep
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2. Anatole France, The Gmd(''J1 qf
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ImjJroved. The preface was extensiv
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shameful than fraud." Cicero, De Of
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o o o 00
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2. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels,
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38. Baudelaire as a LiteraJY Critic
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29. Marx, Capital, vol. 1, p. 552n.
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00 o o 11. GleicllSclzaltung ('ali
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21. Benjamin wrote this sketch in F
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3. Alfred Gotthold Meyer, Eisenbaut
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or in a desultory fashion, we fll1d
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Guide to Names and Terms Abdel Krim
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Bairam. Either of two Muslim religi
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Blonde!, Jacques Franois (1705-1774
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Carnot, Lazare (1753-1823). Statesm
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lections of folklore and popular ta
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Delord, TaxiIe (1815-1877). French
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Enfantin, Barthelemy-Prosper (1796-
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founded the religion known as Evada
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2 information about his parentage.
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Jehuda Uudah) ben Halevy (ca. 1085-
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La Hodde, Lucien de (1898-1865). Po
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.9 Loban, Georges (1770-1838). High
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Mehring, Franz (1846-1919). German
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Les Mysteres de Londres. Novel by P
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acquired the patent, and developed
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Prevost, Pierre (1764-1823). French
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guages at Erlangen and Berlin. Auth
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scent. Author of Nouveaux PrincijJe
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Unold, Max (1885-1964). German writ
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Index Abele! Krim, 531, 878 About,
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377; Toussenel and, 2111-242; trans
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Borme, Daniel, 617618 Bome, Ludwig,
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Degas, Edgar, 688 D'Eichthal, Gusta
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Galeries de Bois, 39 Galignani, Le,
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Ingres,Jean Auguste Dominique, 556,
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Lucas-Dubrctol1,J, 47, 523, 744, 75
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Paris, Gaston, 549 Paris Chronicle,
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Romains,jules, 99, 266,373, 443-444
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Varlil1, Louis-Eugene, 795 Varnhage