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    This article reads Walter Benjamin’s philosophy of history alongside the concept of totality. Well-known for its evocative imagery and esotericism, Benjamin’s outlook on history is generally understood to be firmly anti-Hegelian and implicitly non-Marxist. Here, these readings are challenged by focusing on Benjamin’s ambivalent receptions of Hegel and Lukács. By critiquing readings of Benjamin that position his philosophy of history as primarily theological and thus apolitical, this article argu…Read more