Thinking the Event with Hannah Arendt

European Journal of Social Theory 9 (1):43-57 (2006)
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Abstract

This article addresses the critique of the modern conception of history and time through a reading of Hannah Arendt. Arendt’s work provides an alternative to the thought with universal pretensions that has dominated the panorama of modernity. She thinks the historical through contradiction and gives a place to human experience next to facts. In thinking the event Arendt shows the insufficiency of the modern chronological appropriation of the past and the limits of using theory as a given framework of interpretation. Understanding the historical event is to challenge the chronology assumed in our forms of understanding and representing the real. Her work blurs the tacit boundary that lurks in modern forms of representation between a ‘dynamic’ present and a ‘congealed’ past. Arendt’s thinking provides a critique of the modern notions of time and history as of the use of theory as a fixed framework of interpretation.

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Citations of this work

Political Agents as Relational Selves.Nicole Dewandre - 2018 - Philosophy Today 62 (2):493-519.

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References found in this work

The Reluctant Modernism of Hannah Arendt.Seyla Benhabib - 1996 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
Hannah Arendt.Julia Kristeva - 2001 - Columbia University Press.
Hannah Arendt and the Jewish Question.Richard J. Bernstein - 1996 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 34 (1):323-326.
Karl Marx and the tradition of western political thought.Hannah Arendt - 2002 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 69 (2):273-319.

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