Dark times demand clear understanding, not false optimism. Few thinkers offer greater resources than Hannah Arendt for illuminating the darkness. The essays in this fine collection bring out both the clear foundations and the sometimes ambiguous nuances of Arendts thought. They help us think better in a troubled era that desperately needs careful, historically-informed, and hard-headed analysis. Craig Calhoun, Social Science Research Council and New York University
Written by both established and up-and-coming scholars, the innovative essays collected in this important volume reflect the depth and breadth of the thinker at their center. The reception of Hannah Arendts work has changed profoundly in the years since Seyla Benhabib began working on her: from a nearly exclusive focus in the US context on The Human Condition, scholarly attention has shifted to The Origins of Totalitarianism, Eichmann in Jerusalem and Arendts Jewish writings. The result? A thinker who is as much public intellectual as political theorist, and whose topics are both urgently timely and timeless, as indicated by this volumes well-chosen focus on equality, sovereignty, the rule of law, the politics of judgment, evil and courage in Arendts thought. Bonnie Honig, Northwestern University and American Bar Foundation, Chicago
Amidst the abundant writings on Hannah Arendt, Politics in Dark Times deserves a niche of its own. Every one of these essays is probing, discriminating, and thoughtful. Looked at as a whole, they underscore the salience of Arendts thought in elucidating such distinct yet linked political issues as human freedom and the limits of human action; political equality and its counterpart, political responsibility; ruling, the rule of law, and being ruled; nationalism, imperialism, and racism; the nation-state and the paradox of human rights; internal and external state sovereignty; popular sovereignty in a republican democracy; territorial versus universal jurisdiction in the prosecution of crimes against humanity; genocide, Jihadism, and totalitarianism; the motiveless crime of a desk-murderer; the intelligibility of banal evil; and the activity of a political spectator or judge. To encounter Arendt as a living presence among these speakers cannot but benefit all students of her thought. Jerome Kohn, The New School for Social Research
The essays in Politics in Dark Times range across a wide variety of topicsfrom democratic theory, political action, and ideas of sovereignty to international law, the roots of imperialism and the causes of genocide. The level of scholarship is consistently high, and all the contributions are illuminating. More than a few of the essays promise to become classics in their own right. When it comes to bringing Hannah Arendts thought into dialogue with the some of the most pressing political issues of our time, Politics in Dark Times succeeds brilliantly. Dana Villa, Packey Dee Professor of Political Theory, University of Notre Dame