Résumé du livre
Hannah Arendt was a German-born scholar, philosopher and prolific writer. As a Jewish refugee from the Nazi regime, she was able to escape a forced march between internment camps in France and find passage to America, where she became the first woman to hold the rank of full professor at Princeton University. Her other books include The Human Condition (1958) and Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil (1963).
The rise of nation-states initially promised fairness and stability but quickly gave way to power struggles, with imperialism emerging as a tool for economic expansion at the cost of ethical and legal principles. Racism became a convenient justification for imperialist exploitation, while pan-nationalist movements manipulated history to assert racial superiority and dominance. Totalitarian regimes, such as Nazism and Stalinism, thrived in environments of disillusionment and isolation, using propaganda to exploit societal vulnerabilities and suppress individuality. The erosion of democratic representation left disenfranchised masses susceptible to manipulation, enabling authoritarian leaders to consolidate power by exploiting discontent. Anti-Semitism, deeply rooted in Europe’s shifting class structures, intensified during periods of upheaval, with Jews scapegoated as outsiders despite their limited influence. Totalitarianism’s dehumanizing nature stripped individuals of free will, turning them into tools of expansionist ideologies. By rewriting history and fostering loyalty through fear, these regimes prioritized domination above all else, revealing the fragility of democratic systems when large segments of society feel excluded. This chapter sets the stage for examining how these dynamics shaped the global political landscape in the 20th century.
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