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Thinking in Dark Times
Hannah Arendt on Ethics and Politics
Edited by Roger Berkowitz, Jeffrey Katz, and Thomas Keenan
$28.00
ISBN: 9780823230761
Book (Paperback)
Fordham University Press
8 x 9
288 pages
23 black and white illustrations
October 2009



Quantity:

"Artfully balancing conceptual precision and editorial care with a deep sense of urgency, this volume of essays on one of the 20th century’s great theorists of totalitarianism and anti-Semitism offers a stimulating examination of Arendt’s political and philosophical writings. The pieces analyze the sociopolitical ramifications of her life as well as more focused discussions of key topics in the social and the political realms. Cathy Caruth offers an exemplary reading of the relationship between the Pentagon Papers and Arendt’s notion of the modern political lie that attempts not simply to cover over mistakes but to replace reality entirely by fabricating new histories. Uday Mehta gives a fascinating outline of Arendt’s views on politics and terror, while Christopher Hitchens offers some brief, idiosyncratic reflections on anti-Semitism. Contributors return repeatedly to Arendt’s 1963 coverage of the trial of Nazi official Adolf Eichmann. The essays lack a consensus on Arendt’s notion of the 'banality of evil,' but it is precisely the rich variety of interpretations together with a wonderful selection of images from her personal library that make the collection so compelling."—Publishers Weekly

“This volume succeeds in approaching Hannah Arendt’s philosophy with a fresh eye.” —Jill Stauffer, John Jay College

“Berkowitz, Katz, and Keenan have compiled a major addition to scholarship on Arendt while continuing her bracing, argumentative, and life-promotiong political commitments.” —Kennan Ferguson, University of Wisconsin-Milwuakee

"These essays were written in honour of what would have been Hannah Arendt’s 100th birthday, an apt occasion on which to commemorate this great theorist of natality. And what a gift this volume is! Packed with innovative readings of her work and life, Thinking in Dark Times re-embeds Arendt in the worldliness from which she proudly took her own bearings. The questions raised regarding political action, torture, truth in politics, intellectual life, antisemitism and the destructiveness to democracy of chatter, withdrawal, rage and dishonesty are, to say the least, pressing. Thus, the volume assaults the reader with its urgency. But it is also timeless, as the best scholarship is. It stands all by itself as testimony to why Arendt continues to grab the attention of scholars of politics, culture and literature."—Bonnie Honig, Northwestern University

Hannah Arendt is one of the most important political theorists of the twentieth century. In her works, she grappled with the dark events of that century, probing the nature of power, authority, and evil, and seeking to confront totalitarian horrors on their own terms.

This book focuses on how, against the professionalized discourses of theory, Arendt insists on the greater political importance of the ordinary activity of thinking. Indeed, she argues that the activity of thinking is the only reliable protection against the horrors that buffeted the last century. Its essays explore and enact that activity, which Arendt calls the habit of erecting obstacles to oversimplifications, compromises, and conventions.

Most of the essays were written for a conference at Bard College celebrating the 100th anniversary of Arendt’s birth. Arendt left her personal library and literary effects to Bard, and she is buried in the Bard College cemetery.

Material from the Bard archive—such as a postcard to Arendt from Walter Benjamin or her annotation in her copy of Machiavelli’s The Prince—and images from her life are interspersed with the essays in this volume.

The volume will offer provocations and insights to Arendt scholars, students discovering Arendt’s work, and general readers attracted to Arendt’s vision of the importance of thinking in our own dark times.

CONTRIBUTORS: Mark Antaki, Peter Baehr, Seyla Benhabib, Roger Berkowitz, Jay Bernstein, Richard Bernstein, Peg Birmingham, Jack Blum, Leon Botstein, Cathy Caruth, Drucilla Cornell, Jennifer Culbert, Yaron Ezrahi, Ron Feldman, Christopher Hitchens, George Kateb, Jerome Kohn, Reinhard Laube, Shai Lavi, Patchen Markell, Uday Mehta, Verity Smith, Suzanne Vromen, and Elisabeth Young-Bruehl.

During her time in the United States, HANNAH ARENDT (1906–1975) lectured at Princeton, Berkeley, Chicago, and other universities, but was most closely associated with the New School for Social Research. Her most noted works include The Origins of Totalitarianism (1951), The Human Condition (1958), Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil (1963), and Men in Dark Times.

ROGER BERKOWITZ is Academic Director of the Hannah Arendt Center for Ethical and Political Thinking at Bard College, where he is Assistant Professor of Political Studies and Human Rights. He is the author of The Gift of Science: Leibniz and the Modern Legal Tradition.

JEFFREY KATZ is Dean of Information Services and Director of Libraries at Bard College and Executive Director of the Hannah Arendt Center at Bard.

THOMAS KEENAN is Director of the Human Rights Project and Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at Bard College. He is the author of Fables of Responsibility: Aberrations and Predicaments in Ethics and Politics.

News and Events:
Interview with Harper's Magazine

Related Links:
Hannah Arendt Center at Bard College


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