Men in Dark Times

Front Cover
HarperCollins, Mar 25, 1970 - Philosophy - 285 pages
“Each [essay is] a model of clarity, weight, gravity . . . each superbly centered on the moods, manners, works . . . of ten exemplary men and women” (Kirkus Reviews, starred review).

“Dark times” is Brecht's phrase, and Hannah Arendt uses it suggest that those she writes about are not “mouthpieces of the Zeitgeist”, but, rather, that the routine repetitive horrors of the twentieth century form the substance of the dark against which their lives of illumination were lived. Containing essays from Dr. Arendt on Karl Jaspers, Rosa Luxemburg, Pope John XXIII, Isak Dinesen, Bertolt Brecht, Randall Jarrell, and others whose lives and work shed light on the early part of the century.
 

Contents

THOUGHTS ABOUT LESSING
18711919
A CHRISTIAN ON ST PETERS CHAIR FROM 1958 TO 1963
A LAUDATIO
CITIZEN OF THE WORLD?
18851963
18861951
18921940
18981956
19031954
19141965
Back Matter
Back Cover
Spine
Copyright

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About the author (1970)

Hannah Arendt (1906–1975) is considered one of the most important and influential thinkers of the twentieth century. A political theorist and philosopher, she is also the author of Crises of the Republic, On Violence, The Life of the Mind, and Men in Dark Times. The Origins of Totalitarianism was first published in 1951.

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