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>> No.17149168 [View]
File: 70 KB, 564x232, worker.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
17149168

Here is the quote on marxism and the form of the worker.
Last bit on form unless there are any questions that come up. The cliche is that of the forest and trees, it remains the best distinction. One may also see the imprint of the forest, and, as Jünger suggests, Goethe's Urpflanze is the most complete understanding of this form. In the end the tree perfects the form of the plant. Goethe's poems on forests, plants, and animals are great here, as well as Hesse's "Trees".
What is the forest that survives in the German myth when the gods meet there end? This is the highest point where form transitions into dominion.

>> No.14258789 [View]
File: 70 KB, 564x232, worker.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
14258789

>>14258660
>However with the figure of the worker appearing in some of those later works, I think I will go back and read it sometime.

The worker continues to be an important concept for Junger, having as it does implications for mobilization, technology, and mass-culture--among other things.

Here's a reference to 'the worker' in a letter Junger sent to Jean-Michel Palmier in 1968:

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