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result(s) for
"Kohn, Jerome"
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Loyalty as Betrayal
2019
Hannah Arendt's judgment of Bertolt Brecht instantiates her distinction between work and action. The highest, most enduring form of work for Arendt is art, especially poetry and poetic drama, because they are closest to action. Brecht's poems and dramas are replete with intimations of action. This essay is an interpretation of Arendt's judgment of Brecht's loyalty to an ideology that purported to save even as it betrayed those who struggled. To Arendt this was emblematic of Brecht's betrayal of the jealous gods of poetry. Their punishment for crossing the border separating art from action was to retrieve the great gifts they had bestowed on him.
Journal Article
Hannah Arendt: The Appearances of Estrangement
2018
The times we live in are perverse in diverse ways, not only, but also not least, politically. In 2016 we elected a president whose appearance in public is avaricious, destructive, deceitful, predatory, and incoherent. It would be hard to imagine Balzac or Dickens depicting a fictional character more brazenly self-absorbed than this brag-gart who has no hesitation in calling himself \"like, really smart.\" Was it Trump alone who visualized himself presiding over—literally, sitting before—more than 300 million Americans? According to him, that qualifies \"as not smart, but genius.\" But what are the odds, one wonders, of this vulgarian stinging and awakening us, the people, from the political narcolepsy we've dreamed in for the past 50 years? The first part of this paper examines the German noun Entfremdung. The second part discusses an op-ed piece by Susan Rice. The third part deals with the act of estrangement and its forfeiture of human plurality. The fourth sorts through Arendt's many meanings of the word plurality. In the fifth part, the modern growth of worldlessness is seen through the lens of the loss of the human faculties of speech and action. The sixth part shows how Arendt learned from Homer the uniqueness of human life. The final part cites Schiller's poem, The Maiden from Afar, which revealed Arendt to those closest to her and to herself.
Journal Article