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In France there is a Place Hannah-Arendt (Paris) and many streets named Rue Hannah Arendt, including in Strasbourg and Tours. [8] In addition to Hanover, a number of schools in Germany have been named after Hannah Arendt, including those at Haßloch, [9] Barsinghausen, [10] Lengerich [11] and Berlin. [12]
Hannah Arendt lecturing in Germany, 1955 Arendt taught at many institutions of higher learning from 1951 onward, but, preserving her independence, consistently refused tenure-track positions. She was a visiting scholar at the University of Notre Dame , University of California, Berkeley , Princeton University (where she was the first woman to ...
Linden-Limmer ([lɪndən lɪmɪ] listen ⓘ) is the tenth borough (Stadtbezirk) of Hanover, the state capital of Lower Saxony.It became part of the city in 1920. [2] Linden-Limmer is where Hannah Arendt was born.
The Landtag of Lower Saxony, the state parliament, resides today in the Leineschloss at Hannah-Arendt-Platz. Remains of the historic city wall and the Beguinage Tower were integrated into the Historisches Museum Hannover , designed in 1966 by architect Dieter Oesterlen .
The Hannah Arendt Institute for Totalitarianism Studies (German: Hannah-Arendt-Institut für Totalitarismusforschung, abbreviated HAIT) is a research institute hosted by Dresden University of Technology and devoted to the comparative analysis of dictatorships.
Rahel Varnhagen c. 1800. Rahel Varnhagen: The Life of a Jewess [1] is a biography of Rahel Varnhagen written by political philosopher Hannah Arendt.Originally her Habilitationsschrift she completed it in exile as a refugee, but was not published till 1957, in English, in the UK (London) by East and West Library.
Hannah Arendt was a philosopher accustomed to using metaphors. Among other things, she advocated for their use in philosophical reflection in her Journal of Thoughts. [1] In The Origins of Totalitarianism, Arendt explored the question of totalitarianism – how these types of regimes form, evolve, exist, and perish. [2]
Hannah Arendt, who reported on Eichmann's trial for The New Yorker, published Eichmann in Jerusalem in 1963, a book sometimes falsely credited with being the source of the term "desk murderer". In this book she described him and his associates as the "modern, state-employed mass murderers" and talks of the "bureaucracy of murder".