When Hannah Arendt completed her work The Origins of Totalitarianism‚ she essentially took a historical approach for her analysis. The stories of Nazism and Stalinism exhibited the power of reorienting the mass for political purpose. However‚ her work foreshadowed what happened 15 years later in China -- The Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution. The key elements reappeared and constituted another experiment of pushing the regime to be totalitarian. I argue that the influence of mass and the strategy
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Hannah Arendt She was a German-Jewish philosopher and writer‚ not a trained‚ professional historian and thus her writing on the Eichmann case was focussed on a philosophical interest she had with the nature of evil. As a Jew who fled Germany from the Nazis in 1933 and then also fled France in 1940‚ Arendt uses her 1963 report to focus on the ‘banality of evil’ to deny Nazism all glamour‚ a way of showing her utter contempt for the movement. This contempt extends to her portrayal of Eichmann‚ as she
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This essay shall be discussing Hannah Arendt’s notions on violence‚ the implements of it‚ the relationship between violence and the state‚ how the meaning of violence is inherent in the text through certain use of language and how violence is specifically evoked through the language of the characters in the play‚ for example in Antigone‚ the use of the chorus‚ the messenger to report the violence to Creon‚ and the words spoken by Creon and Antigone throughout the play. The essay shall also be looking
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Hannah Arendt‚ one of the most influential political theorists of the twentieth century‚ published a book in 1958 titled The Human Condition. In this book‚ Arendt discusses many ways in which she views the human condition‚ but more specifically she discusses its relation to labor and work. She characterizes labor and work as essential aspects of the human condition. Arendt goes on to specify these two aspects in the sense of the public realm versus the private realm‚ as well as in terms of the social
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Margaret Canovan argued that Hannah Arendt failed to realize that political opinions too have drawbacks. According to Arendt‚ different people have different opinions and claims that one political opinion can bring an enhancement on another. Based on this assumption‚ she adopted Kant’s notion of “judgement‚” that is‚ “to think for the sake of general” into her political thinking. But Habermas rejected her ideas on the ground that it is “monologic.” She seems to have left no room for “rational truth”
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Hannah Arendt was a german-american philosopher. She was born in Germany on October 14‚ 1906. She died in New York on December 4‚ 1975. She came from a Jewish family and lost her father at a young age. Hannah studied philosophy at several universities‚ including University of Marburg in Germany. At Marburg she studied with Martin Heidegger‚ a german philosopher. He was her professor and they soon were in a romantic relationship that lasted three years. In 1928 she earned her Ph.D. at the University
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Arendt: The Human Condition-Action Summary Hannah Arendt’s Action chapter in “The Human Condition” analyses the relationship between action and human existence. One’s actions are interpreted as the defining factor in “who” an individual is‚ as opposed to “what”. While the individual may be performer of his own specific action‚ interpretation of said task is out of his hands‚ making the individual slave to the interpretation of others. The tasks one performs suffer under the critical gaze of all
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the Human Condition‚ by Hannah Arendt‚ the fundamental qualities of human behavior are described and analyzed. These qualities are first expressed by discussing the different aspects of life for Athenian Greeks. Arendt describes the division between public and private life and how it should be applied in the modern American society as well. Technology and capitalism are blurring the lines of Arendt’s civic ideal between the public and private realms of society. Arendt refers to the three elements
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Totalitarian regime uses terror on psychological levels to achieve its goals. Hanna Arendt mentions in her essay that: ”Where the rule of terror is brought to perfection‚ as in concentration camps‚ propaganda disappears entirely” (Arendt 2) Moreover‚ Hannah Arendt also describes propaganda as “the most important instrument of totalitarianism for dealing with the non-totalitarian world” On the other hand she says that: “terror is the very essence of its form of government” From
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2013 Guerra i Outline Thesis: A key concept to understanding Hannah Arendt’s “Total Domination” is the essence of terror and the importance of concentration camps in maintaining the Nazi totalitarian state. 1. There are numerous parts to the ideology behind the fundamental belief of totalitarianism. A) “…that everything is possible‚ is being verified.”(Total Domination‚ 280) B) This ideology “strives to organize the infinite plurality and differentiation of [humans]” (Total
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