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Hannah Arendt – endlich verstehen

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"Ich will verstehen". So einfach beschreibt Hannah Arendt ihr Schaffen. Aber ihr eigenes "Denken ohne Geländer" nachzuvollziehen, ist nicht so leicht – aphoristisch, widersprüchlich, streitlustig, wie sie nun mal war. Tina Heidborn und Heide Oestreich machen in diesem Podcast sechs Tiefenbohrungen – mit Menschen, die Arendt bis heute nicht losgelassen hat. Wie banal ist das Böse heute? Wie hat Hannah Arendt den Feminismus beeinflusst? Wie die Debatte um Asyl und Menschenrechte? Und was kann ...
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The third episode of our Eichmann in Jerusalem series of Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's Eichmann in Jerusalem, a Report on the Banality of Evil. THE HOSTRoger Berkowit…
  continue reading
 
The second episode of our Eichmann in Jerusalem series of Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's Eichmann in Jerusalem, a Report on the Banality of Evil. THE HOSTRoger Berkowi…
  continue reading
 
The first episode (of the second book) in our Podcast series, Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's Eichmann in Jerusalem, a Report on the Banality of Evil. THE HOSTRoger Ber…
  continue reading
 
The 14th episode of our Podcast, Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's classic analysis of the 20th century, The Origins of Totalitarianism. In Origins, Arendt tracks the ris…
  continue reading
 
The 13th episode of our Podcast, Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's classic analysis of the 20th century, The Origins of Totalitarianism. In Origins, Arendt tracks the ris…
  continue reading
 
The 12th episode of our Podcast, Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's classic analysis of the 20th century, The Origins of Totalitarianism. In Origins, Arendt tracks the ris…
  continue reading
 
The eleventh episode of our Podcast, Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's classic analysis of the 20th century, The Origins of Totalitarianism. In Origins, Arendt tracks the…
  continue reading
 
The tenth episode of our Podcast, Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's classic analysis of the 20th century, The Origins of Totalitarianism. In Origins, Arendt tracks the ri…
  continue reading
 
The ninth episode of the new Podcast, Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's classic analysis of the 20th century, The Origins of Totalitarianism. In Origins, Arendt tracks th…
  continue reading
 
Don't miss the fourth and last of our special Friendship podcast series based on our Summer Virtual Reading Group on Arendt & Friendship. Hannah Arendt, whose thinking is at the heart of our center, was said to have a “genius for friendship.” Known as a political thinker, Arendt wrote to her friend Gershom Scholem that she could never love a state …
  continue reading
 
Don't miss the third of our special Friendship podcast series based on our Summer Virtual Reading Group on Arendt & Friendship. Hannah Arendt, whose thinking is at the heart of our center, was said to have a “genius for friendship.” Known as a political thinker, Arendt wrote to her friend Gershom Scholem that she could never love a state or a polit…
  continue reading
 
The eighth episode of our new Podcast, Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's classic analysis of the 20th century, The Origins of Totalitarianism. In Origins, Arendt tracks t…
  continue reading
 
Don't miss the second of our special Friendship podcast series based on our Summer Virtual Reading Group on Arendt & Friendship. Hannah Arendt, whose thinking is at the heart of our center, was said to have a “genius for friendship.” Known as a political thinker, Arendt wrote to her friend Gershom Scholem that she could never love a state or a poli…
  continue reading
 
The seventh episode of the new Podcast, Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's classic analysis of the 20th century, The Origins of Totalitarianism. In Origins, Arendt tracks …
  continue reading
 
The sixth episode of the new Podcast, Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's classic analysis of the 20th century, The Origins of Totalitarianism. In Origins, Arendt tracks th…
  continue reading
 
The fifth episode of the new Podcast, Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's classic analysis of the 20th century, The Origins of Totalitarianism. In Origins, Arendt tracks th…
  continue reading
 
Don't miss the first of our special Friendship podcast series based on our Summer Virtual Reading Group on Arendt & Friendship. Hannah Arendt, whose thinking is at the heart of our center, was said to have a “genius for friendship.” Known as a political thinker, Arendt wrote to her friend Gershom Scholem that she could never love a state or a polit…
  continue reading
 
The fourth episode of the new Podcast, Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's classic analysis of the 20th century, The Origins of Totalitarianism. In Origins, Arendt tracks t…
  continue reading
 
The third episode of the new Podcast, Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's classic analysis of the 20th century, The Origins of Totalitarianism. In Origins, Arendt tracks th…
  continue reading
 
This is our second episode of the new Podcast, Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's classic analysis of the 20th century, The Origins of Totalitarianism. In Origins, Arendt …
  continue reading
 
Our first episode of the new Podcast, Reading Hannah Arendt with Roger Berkowitz. Our podcast follows the book that we are reading in our current Virtual Reading Group (VRG), which meets weekly on Fridays at 1 PM EST. We are currently reading Arendt's classic analysis of the 20th century, The Origins of Totalitarianism. In Origins, Arendt tracks th…
  continue reading
 
The crisis facing democratic regimes today is cause for serious concern; it is also an opportunity for deep reflection on questions and assumptions concerning liberal representative democracy. Instead of assuming a defensive posture and taking up arms to defend the status quo, our conference asks: how can we revitalize our democracy? This event too…
  continue reading
 
The crisis facing democratic regimes today is cause for serious concern; it is also an opportunity for deep reflection on questions and assumptions concerning liberal representative democracy. Instead of assuming a defensive posture and taking up arms to defend the status quo, our conference asks: how can we revitalize our democracy? This event too…
  continue reading
 
The crisis facing democratic regimes today is cause for serious concern; it is also an opportunity for deep reflection on questions and assumptions concerning liberal representative democracy. Instead of assuming a defensive posture and taking up arms to defend the status quo, our conference asks: how can we revitalize our democracy? This event too…
  continue reading
 
In the latest Amor Mundi Podcast, Roger Berkowitz and Masha Gessen talk about how even amidst the rise of subjectivism and the internalization of the world—what Hannah Arendt calls world alienation—there has remained a commitment to a common or shared world. Yet, it is precisely that common world that today seems endangered, and Gessen asks how lan…
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"Und? Was haste jetzt gelernt?" Neun Monate der Annäherung an Hannah Arendt - unter Pandemiebedingungen. Das war manchmal zum Aufgeben anstrengend - aber auch die Chance, viel tiefer einzusteigen in die Welt der Hannah A., als wir es je vor hatten. Im Nachgespräch fragten wir, Tina Heidborn und Heide Oestreich, uns, was nun wohl hängebleibt, in uns…
  continue reading
 
"Ich will verstehen". So einfach beschreibt Hannah Arendt ihr Schaffen. Aber ihr eigenes "Denken ohne Geländer" nachzuvollziehen, ist nicht so leicht - aphoristisch, widersprüchlich, streitlustig, wie sie nun mal war. Tina Heidborn und Heide Oestreich machen in diesem Podcast sechs Tiefenbohrungen - mit Menschen, die Arendt bis heute nicht losgelas…
  continue reading
 
Hannah Arendt sei ihre "Hausphilosophin", sagt die feministische Soziologie-Professorin Sabine Hark, Leiterin des Zentrums für Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung an der TU Berlin. Aber warum? Klar, Hannah Arendt pflegte hingebungsvoll ihre Freundschaften mit Frauen. Aber mit Feminismus hatte sie nichts am Hut. Aber ihre politiktheoretischen Schrifte…
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Die NS-Zeit war auch ein gigantischer Raubzug: Die Nazis rafften alles zusammen, was jüdische Bürger nicht rechtzeitig in Sicherheit bringen konnten, darunter zahllose Kunstwerke und Kulturgüter. Hannah Arendt kam vier Jahre nach Kriegsende zum ersten Mal wieder nach Deutschland, und zwar als Geschäftsführerin der "Jewish Cultural Reconstruction" -…
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Je abstrakter das Recht, desto weniger kümmert uns die Einhaltung. Hannah Arendts Polemiken gegen die Menschenrechte wirken vor dem Hintergrund der NS-Zeit verständlich – aber auch extrem. Doch sie hat auch präzise die "Lebenslüge" der "Declaration of human rights" benannt, sagt der Philosoph Heiner Bielefeldt, langjähriger Leiter des Deutschen Ins…
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Das sogenannte Böse ist eigentlich ganz banal. Mit dieser These in ihrem Buch "Eichmann in Jerusalem" über den Holocaust-Organisator Adolf Eichmann brachte Hannah Arendt in den sechziger Jahren die halbe Welt gegen sich auf. Kein Wunder, rückte sie doch den Verbrecher, den man so gern dämonisiert, wieder in den Bereich des Menschlichen. Tina Heidbo…
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Sie haben sich beide in ihre Dozenten verliebt. Sie sind beide seltene Exemplare von Frauen in der politischen Theorie. Und sie haben es beide gern konkret. Kein Wunder, dass Gesine Schwan, Professorin für politische Theorie und Leiterin der Grundwertekommission der SPD, Hannah Arendt interessant findet. Und auch in ihrer Vorstellung von Macht und …
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Die Stimme. Die Zigaretten. Das Leben als Verfolgte, Geflüchtete, intellektuelle Weltbürgerin. Aber vor allem diese Ausnahmepersönlichkeit: Wir reden über das Faszinosum Hannah Arendt mit der Frau, die sich gerade am intensivsten mit allen Facetten Arendts auseinander gesetzt hat: Monika Boll, Philosophin, Publizistin und Kuratorin der vielgepriese…
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This is episode 10, “Revitalizing Democracy Through Citizen Assemblies.” It features the Arendt Center's Founder and Director Roger Berkowitz and Jonas Kunz, co-founder of the Bard Institute for the Revival of Democracy Through Sortition, giving a talk and leading a discussion over Zoom. The talk was organized by Lawrence Davis-Hollander and the Sc…
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This is episode 9, “The Rule of Nobody,” It features the Arendt Center's Founder and Director Roger Berkowitz in a Zoom conversation with Philip K. Howard, lawyer and activist. Howard has written five books including “The Death of Common Sense” and “The Rule of Nobody,” a reference to Hannah Arendt’s description of bureaucratic rule. He also starte…
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This is episode 7,”The Thrill of Democracy.” It features the Arendt Center's Founder and Director Roger Berkowitz in conversation with Olivia Guaraldo, a political thinker, Professor of Political Thought, and Director of the Hannah Arendt Center at the University of Verona in Italy. Podcast editing and music by Andy Evan Cohen. Additional narration…
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This is episode 6,”Thinking in Dark Times.” It features the Arendt Center's Founder and Director Roger Berkowitz and Samantha Hill, Assistant Director of the Hannah Arendt Center, in a wide-ranging conversation about thinking during the time of the plague. Podcast editing and music by Andy Evan Cohen. Additional narration by Janet Bentley. Illustra…
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This is episode 5,” Looking In the Mirror.” It features the Arendt Center's Founder and Director Roger Berkowitz in conversation with Jerome Kohn, a political thinker, the literary executor for Hannah Arendt, and the editor of many volumes of Arendt’s posthumous works including “Thinking Without a Bannister,” “The Jewish Writings,” “Essays in Under…
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Join Roger Berkowitz as he talks with Seyla Benhabib, the Eugene Meyer Professor of Political Science and Philosophy at Yale University. Her new book, Exile, Statelessness, and Migration explores the intertwined lives, careers, and writings of a group of prominent Jewish intellectuals during the mid-twentieth century, including Hannah Arendt, Theod…
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