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Hannah Arendt
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Hannah Arendt is one of the twentieth century's most studied political philosophers, and her work appears across courses in political theory, philosophy, history, sociology, and Holocaust studies. Students write about her because her ideas engage fundamental questions about power, authority, memory, and what it means to act as a political being in the modern world. Her analysis of historical events such as the Trial of Eichmann in Jerusalem makes her especially relevant to discussions of justice, moral responsibility, and the nature of evil, while her broader arguments about society, language, and existence give instructors in multiple disciplines a reason to assign her texts.

Papers on Arendt tend to take several distinct approaches. Comparative essays are common, placing her in dialogue with thinkers such as Nietzsche and Karl Jaspers to examine how different philosophers treat memory, power, and language. Other papers focus on specific concepts she develops, including communicative power, autonomy, and cosmopolitanism, tracing how these ideas evolve across her arguments. Historical and case-study approaches examine her treatment of the Holocaust and politics under conditions of extreme violence, while some essays connect her framework to social psychology, testimony, forgiveness, and consumption in contemporary society.

A strong essay on Arendt requires a precise thesis that commits to one concept or tension rather than surveying her entire career. Evidence drawn directly from her arguments, and from the historical or theoretical contexts she addresses, carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating her ideas as self-evident rather than showing how her reasoning works and why it remains contested or significant.

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Paper Masters
Home Examination Culture Marianne Hirsch and Leo
In Hirsch and Spitzer's article (2009) the endeavor to understand the utility of witness testimony as it contributes to the archive of memory, specifically of the Holocaust. They find witness testimony to be both quite useful, but at the same time problematic or at least not wholly unreliable. The authors contend that there is a place for witness testimony in memory studies because testimony is a form of memory. Memories of catastrophe and tragedy cannot fully be recorded or documented with words or print.
Essay Undergraduate
Consumption Society and Culture
The paper topic is consumption, society and culture. It starts off by explaining the concept of cultural industry and how popular media and entertainment has a massive impact and influence on the shape of the culture and its society. The paper also focuses on the Hollywood movies to show support.
Paper Undergraduate
Framing Testimony
Dominick LaCapra's essay "Here There Is No Why" takes its title from the answer that an S.S. at Auschwitz gave to Promo Levi when he dared to ask the "Why?" question. To be sure, the guard was simply attempting to be cynical and sarcastic rather than reflective or philosophical, but LaCapra is also critical of Claude Lanzmann for failing to ask this question enough in Shoah. All of the Germans who Lanzmann interviewed were either perpetrators of complicit bystanders, and they spent a great deal of time explaining what, where and how the Holocaust happened, while also denying or minimizing their own responsibility. Franz Suchomel, the S.S. guard at Treblinka, was a notable exception to this rule, but Lanzmann interviewed him with a hidden camera after promising to keep his identity anonymous. Almost all of the Jewish survivors described what happened in painful detail, and Lanzmann's preference was to make them literally relive their experiences, but they were not asked why.
Paper Doctorate
Cosmopolitanism: concepts, theories, and contemporary applications
Cosmopolitanism International Law and the Persistence of the Sovereign Nation-State
Research Paper Undergraduate
Power and Language Arendt and Nietzsche
The concept of power has been examined closely by many philosophers throughout human history. These philosophers have different ideas of what power is, but they all, in some way, believe that the concept of language is…
Research Paper Doctorate
Politics during the Holocaust
The human social animal's capacity for collective tyranny and violence in Hannah Arendt's seminal work
Research Paper Doctorate
Totalitarianism Hannah Arendt, in Her Book, Origins
Hannah Arendt, in her book, "Origins of Totalitarianism," attributes the formation of a mass society in Europe in the first decades of the 20th century to "grassroots eruptions" from a number of collective groups.
Paper Undergraduate
Hannah: a character study
¶ … Language, Literary and Cultural Studies
Essay Doctorate
Causes Discernment and Treatment of Spiritual Abuse
Veenhuizen's dissertation explores spiritual abuse, using Relational Theology to understand a healthy spiritual relationship vs. spiritual abuse. In Relational Theology, God offers a bilateral covenant with Him and with…
Research Paper Doctorate
Natural Right and History Leo Strauss
Strauss is contending that the "self-evident" natural rights of man are no more apparent because of a creeping relativism in thought and an increasing dependence on legalism. Thus, "the legislators and the courts"…