Results 291 to 300 of about 272,920 (359)
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Arendt

Totalitarianism and Philosophy, 2019
A. Haworth
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Hannah Arendt and the Raising of Conscience in Business Schools

, 2020
Business schools should be grounded in questions of meaning, not knowledge. Using this basic distinction, inspired by Hannah Arendt, I ask “What if questions of knowledge were subsumed by ones of m...
R. Holt
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Half-Statelessness and Hannah Arendt’s Citizenship Model: The Case of Palestinian Citizens of Israel

Mediterranean Politics, 2020
This article explores Hannah Arendt’s conceptualization of half-statelessness, theorized as the partial invasion of citizenship by characteristics of statelessness.
Noa Gani, Amal Jamal
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Why Arendt Matters

, 2017
Upon publication of her "field manual," The Origins of Totalitarianism, in 1951, Hannah Arendt immediately gained recognition as a major political analyst.
E. Young-Bruehl
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Arendt Corrections

Arendt Studies, 2021
Judith Shklar wrote about Hannah Arendt throughout her career. However, her nuanced readings are often ignored by scholars who prefer to depict both philosophers as stark counter-images. In this paper, I offer a more complex comparison on the basis of all of Shklar’s writings about Arendt.
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Arendt After Jerusalem

New Formations, 2015
Hannah Arendt, The Last, Interview and Other Conversations, New York and London, Melville House 2013, 136pp; $15.95 paperback Marie Luise Knott, Unlearning with Hannah Arendt, D. Dollenmayer (trans.), New York, Other Press 2014, 173pp; $22.95 hardback Bettina Stangneth, Eichmann Before Jerusalem: The Unexamined Life of a Mass Murderer, R. Martin (trans.
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The Arendt Cult

Journal of Contemporary History, 1998
Hannah Arendt (1906-75) was a woman of many parts. She was philosopher, historian, sociologist and also journalist; she wrote poetry but also on technology; she had an interest in theology but also reviewed Kafka, Benjamin and Brecht. The following reflections do not refer to her life's work but merely one, albeit central, aspect that of a political ...
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“Nothing much had happened”: Settler colonialism in Hannah Arendt

European Journal of Political Theory, 2019
Hannah Arendt’s account of imperialism has become an unlikely source of inspiration for scholars invested in anti-colonial and postcolonial critique. However, the role of settler colonialism in her thought has come under far less scrutiny.
David Myer Temin
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