Totalitarianism

part three of: The origins of totalitarianism

196 pages

English language

Published April 5, 1985 by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.

ISBN:
978-0-15-690650-0
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4 stars (19 reviews)

OCLC 11343848

59 editions

Review of 'The origins of totalitarianism' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

The book is very uneven. Some parts are exhilarating to read and intellectually provacative. Others are plodding and dull enough to serve as a soporific. Argument seems to be made too often by assertion, with a few supporting quotes from arbitrary places as weak buttresses for weighty premises.

Nevertheless the analysis of the principles of totalitarianism and their relationship to loneliness and a sort of monomanaical obsession with developing the consequences of an ideology are fascinating reading, as are the portions dealing with the relationship of imperialism and industrial capitalism to the development of fascist ideas.

Ultimately the book strikes me as an excellent essay collection, straddled somewhere between history and philosophy.

Review of 'The origins of totalitarianism' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

The two examples of totalitarianism Earth has on record are the only ones from which we can generalize. While I'm wary of the accuracy of a 2-data point trend line, Hannah Arendt has some interesting observations that serve as warning signs for our society today. Rather than fixating on words labeling ideas, such as "socialism" or "nationalist," Arendt analyzes societal trends that seem to incubate totalitarianism: racism, absolutism, single-party political environments.

Interestingly, totalitarianism doesn't formally replace the previous system in which it metastasized. This book makes me simultaneously realize I need to read more fundamental political theory (Hobbes, Marx) and grow skeptical that any ideologically driven system has all the answers.

Nazi leadership believed: "The more accurately we recognize and observe the laws of nature and life, ... so much the more do we conform to the will of the Almighty. The more insight we have into the will of …

Review of 'The origins of totalitarianism' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

What a horrible time to be reading this! Which, of course, was why I read it.

Though this analysis of late nineteenth-/early twentieth-century history doesn't quite run parallel to today, it's hard to keep the mind from wandering to current events, comparing and contrasting. It's distracting. That constant pulling away, coupled with academic prose, meant for a lot of retracing steps to find where I went off the rails.

Still quite fascinating and enlightening.