Promise of Politics by Hannah Arendt
A critical examination of the entire tradition of Western political thought, from its origins in Plato and Aristotle to its culmination and conclusion in Marx.
The
Promise of Politics
by Hannah Arendt
Biography & Autobiography, Political Philosophy
Shocken Books, July 2005
About the Book
After the publication of The Origins of Totalitarianism in 1951,
Hannah Arendt undertook an investigation of Marxism, a subject that she had
deliberately left out of her earlier work. Her inquiry into Marx’s philosophy
led her to a critical examination of the entire tradition of Western political
thought, from its origins in Plato and Aristotle to its culmination and conclusion
in Marx. The Promise of Politics tells how Arendt came to understand the failure
of that tradition to account for human action.
From the time that Socrates was condemned to death by his fellow citizens, Arendt
finds that philosophers have followed Plato in constructing political theories
at the expense of political experiences, including the pre-philosophic Greek
experience of beginning, the Roman experience of founding, and the Christian
experience of forgiving. It is a fascinating, subtle, and original story, which
bridges Arendt’s work from The Origins of Totalitarianism to
The Human Condition, published in 1958. These writings, which deal
with the conflict between philosophy and politics, have never before been gathered
and published.
The final and longer section of The Promise of Politics, titled “Introduction
into Politics,” was written in German and is published here for the first
time in English. This remarkable meditation on the modern prejudice against
politics asks whether politics has any meaning at all anymore. Although written
in the latter half of the 1950s, what Arendt says about the relation of politics
to human freedom could hardly have greater relevance for our own time.
When politics is considered as a means to an end that lies outside of itself,
when force is used to “create” freedom, political principles vanish
from the face of the earth. For Arendt, politics has no “end”; instead,
it has at times been–and perhaps can be again–the never-ending endeavor
of the great plurality of human beings to live together and share the earth
in mutually guaranteed freedom. That is the promise of politics.
About the Author
Hannah Arendt was born in Hanover, Germany, in 1906, fled to Paris in 1933, and came to the United States after the outbreak of World War II. She was editorial director of Schocken Books from 1946 to 1948. She taught at Berkeley, Princeton, the University of Chicago, and The New School for Social Research. Arendt died in 1975.