“What this book adds to the vast literature on Benjamin is more than a tremendously learned and carefully crafted examination of contexts and intersecting dynamics of religion, culture, and politics that influence him. . . . Zooming in on continuing forms of religiosity usually obscured by the dominant narrative of secularization, Britt provides an original perspective—and undertakes a rescue project in its own right.”—Doris McGonagill Studies in Twentieth- and Twenty-First Century Literature