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The fight for the right to have rights
The Observer
|May 04, 2025
What happened? Why did it happen? How could it have happened?” asked Hannah Arendt in a preface to The Origins of Totalitarianism. These were “questions with which my generation had been forced to live for the better part of its adult life”.
Among the most influential political thinkers of the 20th century, Arendt had, as a Jew, fled Nazi Germany in 1933, eventually finding refuge in America. Now a new edition of her famous 1951 work has been published, with two additional chapters.
The Origins was not conceived as a book about totalitarianism. The first two parts dissect antisemitism and imperialism, respectively. Written in the mid-1940s, these two sections were to have been the core of the book, with a concluding chapter, “Race-Imperialism”, on the Holocaust.
Then came the cold war. A third section on totalitarianism “largely an afterthought”, the Arendt scholar Margaret Canovan observed - was written as the iron curtain descended and the Berlin airlift began. Arendt’s inventory of “elements” underlying totalitarianism - imperialism, racism, antisemitism, the decay of the nation state, the “alliance of capital and the mob” - made more sense in relation to Nazism than to Stalinism. But as the cold war intensified, critics ignored much of this - especially Arendt’s autopsy of imperialism - in favour of a simplistic analogy between two totalitarian systems. Which is a pity, because the themes that preoccupied Arendt are central to our world, too. Her ideas should still command our attention.
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