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Daily Inspiration Quote by Walter Benjamin

"All disgust is originally disgust at touching"

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Benjamin’s line turns the stomach into a theory of society. “All disgust is originally disgust at touching” doesn’t just describe a bodily reflex; it argues that revulsion begins as a boundary problem. Before we moralize, before we classify people or objects as “dirty,” we recoil from contact: skin on skin, mouth on matter, the invasive proximity of what shouldn’t breach the perimeter of the self.

The phrasing is deliberately absolutist, a Benjamin trademark. “All” is less a scientific claim than a provocation meant to collapse lofty disgusts (ethical, aesthetic, political) back into their primitive mechanism. Disgust feels like judgment from on high, but Benjamin drags it down to the level of membranes. The subtext is cutting: our most righteous condemnations often borrow their intensity from a very old panic about contamination. The mind rationalizes what the body first vetoes.

Context matters. Benjamin wrote in a Europe reorganizing itself through hygiene, urban planning, and increasingly murderous fantasies of purity. Disgust was being mobilized as a civic emotion: propaganda that taught populations what not to touch, who not to touch, which neighborhoods to avoid, which bodies to segregate or erase. Benjamin, the critic of modernity’s shock and stimulus, understands the city as a machine of forced proximities - crowds, commodities, advertisements - and of managed distance. Disgust becomes the negative twin of modern fascination.

The sentence works because it’s both intimate and indicting. It catches you in the act of recoiling, then asks what else you’ve learned to recoil from - and who benefited from that lesson.

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All Disgust Is Originally Disgust at Touching - Walter Benjamin
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Walter Benjamin (July 15, 1892 - September 27, 1940) was a Critic from Germany.

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