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Illuminating the Darkness
Hannah Arendt
Illuminating the Darkness
Hannah Arendt : for Love of the World
(by
Young-Bruehl, Elisabeth
)
The Origins of Totalitarianism
(by
Arendt, Hannah
)
Between Past and Future : Six Exercises ...
(by
Hannah Arendt
)
Writer, thinker, activist and political philosopher Hannah Arendt saw the rise and fall of totalitarianism in Europe. She saw the degradation of humanity at the hands of a few fearful ideologues and those who bolstered their heinous actions by standing idly by. After living through two world wars, fleeing from Nazi Germany to Czechoslovakia, Switzerland, France, then finally America,
Hannah Arendt
dedicated her time to the question of thinking itself, and subsequently revealed just what kind of world could allow this timeline.
“We humanize what is going on in the world and in ourselves only by speaking of it, and in the course of speaking of it we learn to be human.” (p. 25,
Men in Dark Times
)
In the almost universally male-dominated field of philosophy and political thinking, Arendt emerged as one of the greatest and most influential of the 21st century. After settling in New York and becoming an American citizen in 1950, she published
The Origins of Totalitarianism
, the book which solidified her reputation as a writer and thinker. In it, she splits the task of discussing the rise of totalitarianism in Europe with three essays “Antisemitism,” “Imperialism,” and “Totalitarianism.” She argues that totalitarianism was a new form of government that “differs essentially from other forms of political oppression known to us such as despotism, tyranny and dictatorship" (p. 460) in how it subjugated both mass populations and political adversaries through terror. She further describes the history of racism as an ideology, and explains how antisemitism was a convenient ideological weapon for imperialism.
Arendt is perhaps most well known for coining the phrase “the banality of evil,” a concept taken from her book
Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil
. The book was a report on
Adolf Eichmann
’s trial, a Nazi German SS leader. Eichmann is described as an average official, with no sociopathic tendencies, no overt hatred for Jews, and no contempt for those who tried him in court. He claimed no responsibility for his crimes, because he was simply doing his job. Arendt writes “He did his duty...; he not only obeyed orders, he also obeyed the law." (p. 135) The banality of evil is then not an argument that all average people are capable of such evil, but rather that stupidity and ignorance is fertile grounds for evil.
Amid the trauma of her life, Arendt still found a deep well of optimism. In the preface of
Dark Times
, she wrote,
“Even in the darkest of times we have the right to expect some illumination, and that such illumination may well come less from theories and concepts than from the uncertain, flickering, and often weak light that some men and women, in their lives and their works, will kindle under almost all circumstances and shed over the time span that was given them on earth … Eyes so used to darkness as ours will hardly be able to tell whether their light was the light of a candle or that of a blazing sun.”
For more Hannah Arendt, read
Between Past and Future: Six Exercises in Political Thought
, “
Leadership, Authenticity, and the Arendtian World
,” “
Hannah Arendt and Feminist Agency
," and “
Hannah Arendt: For Love of the World
.”
By Thad Higa
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