On Totalitarianism

On Totalitarianism

Normaler Preis
$12.50
Sonderpreis
$12.50
Normaler Preis
$12.50
Ausverkauft
Einzelpreis
pro 

Author/Contributor(s): Arendt, Hannah; Berkowitz, Roger
Publisher: Library of America
Date: 3/9/2027
Binding: Paperback
Condition: NEW
More urgent than ever, 3 landmark essays offer a stark warning about the fragility of democracy and the need to think for ourselves.

With an introduction by an acclaimed Arendt scholar, here is a compact introduction to Arendt's larger thinking about the specter of totalitarian rule


In an era of deep political polarization and digital disinformation, as we find ourselves increasingly isolated from others, the insights of Hannah Arendt have never been more relevant. Bringing together three of Arendt’s most important essays, this essential volume offers a clarifying picture of how totalitarianism takes root in the modern soul. 

Writing in the immediate aftermath of World War II, Arendt was not merely a witness to history; she was attempting to understand a terrifying new phenomenon that defied all traditional categories of political science and morality. In “Understanding and Politics” she explores the heavy burden of coming to terms with a world that has been shattered. In "On the Nature of Totalitarianism,” she dismantles the idea that totalitarianism is a modern version of tyranny or authoritarianism, revealing instead a radical new form of government that seeks to abolish human spontaneity itself.  And in "Ideology and Terror," Arendt lays bare the psychological machinery of oppression. She demonstrates how ideologies replace the complexity of reality with a single, unwavering narrative, and how the pervasive experience of loneliness and social isolation creates the perfect soil for total domination to flourish.  

The volume serves as a stark warning that the loss of a shared world and the erosion of truth are the first steps toward the abyss. For citizens, students, and thinkers alike, this volume is an indispensable work about the fragile boundaries of democracy and the need for the freedom to think for ourselves.