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Definition of Hannah Arendt
1. Noun. United States historian and political philosopher (born in Germany) (1906-1975).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Hannah Arendt
Literary usage of Hannah Arendt
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Environmental Theology by Richard Cartwright Austin (1990)
"Immanuel Kant, quoted in Hannah Arendt, Lectures on Kant's Political ...
Kantian philosopher Hannah Arendt also noticed these characteristics of taste. ..."
2. Eternally Yours: Time in Designby Ed van Hinte by Ed van Hinte (2004)
"In her most important study The Human Condition' Hannah Arendt makes a difference
between three aspects of our Vita Activa, our active life: labour, ..."
3. Back from Utopia: The Challenge of the Modern Movementby Hubert-Jan Henket, Hilde Heynen by Hubert-Jan Henket, Hilde Heynen (2002)
"Hannah Arendt has illuminated, in Between Past and Future, how such cultural
battles ofthe tenses are universal and inevitable.30 She cites a parable by ..."
4. A Providential Anti-Semitism: Nationalism and Polity in Nineteenth Century by William O. Oldson (1991)
"Hannah Arendt, herself a refugee from the persecutions of Nazi Germany and a most
thoughtful analyst concerning the characteristics of dictatorship and ..."
5. Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of English Usage by Inc. Merriam-Webster (1994)
"—Hannah Arendt, NY Rev. of Books, 18 Nov. 1971 Sometimes it appears with both:
emerged from the war as a creditor nation —The Encyclopedia Americana, ..."
6. The Legitimacy of International Organizations by Jean-Marc Coicaud (2001)
"Hannah Arendt: An lntroduction. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. 157.
See Stuurman. S.. 1995. ..."
7. The Making of the American Citizenry: An Introduction to Political Socialization by Michael P. Riccards (1973)
"The bureaucratic transcendance of guilt is best explained in Hannah Arendt,
Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil (New York: Viking, ..."
8. Human Rights in the Middle East by DIANE Publishing Company (1992)
"Here I am reminded so much of Hannah Arendt in her grea book of 1952, The Origins
of Totalitarianism, in which she point! out the beginning of ..."