In this book, Jennifer Ring offers a wholly new interpretation of Hannah Arendt’s work, from Eichmann in Jerusalem, with its bitter reception by the Jewish community, to The Life of the Mind. Departing from previous scholarship, Ring applies the perspectives of gender and ethnicity to investigate the extent to which Arendt’s identity as a Jewish woman influenced both her thought and its reception.
Ring’s analysis of Zionist and assimilationist responses to century-old antisemitic sexual stereotypes leads her to argue that Arendt’s criticism of European Jewish leadership during the Holocaust was bound to be explosive. New York and Israeli Jews shared a rare moment of unity in their condemnation of Arendt, charging that she had betrayed the Jewish community—the kind of charge, Ring contends, often leveled against women who dare to speak out publicly against prominent men in their own cultural or racial groups.
The book moves from a feminist analysis of the Eichmann controversy to a discussion of Jewish themes in the structure and content of Arendt’s major theoretical works. Ring makes a powerful contribution to an understanding of Arendt, and of multiculturalism, demonstrating that Arendt’s most sustained philosophical work was influenced as much by her Jewish heritage as by her German education.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1
Introduction
Hannah Arendt, Judaism, and Gender
Identity Politics and Multiculturalism
Assimilation and Gender
Race and Gender
The Context of Feminist Theory
Structure and Organization of the Book
Chapter 2
The Politics of the
Eichmann Controversy
Arendt and
Eichmann in Jerusalem
The Controversy
Chapter 3
Israel and the Holocaust
The Dawning of Reality
The Structure of Discomfort
Attempts at Rescue
Israeli Attitudes Toward the Holocaust Victims
Postwar Negotiations with Germany
The ‘Kastner Trial’
The Trial of Adolf Eichmann
Chapter 4
The New York Intellectuals and
Eichmann in Jerusalem
The New York Intellectuals and Judaism
The New York Intellectuals and the Holocaust
Postwar Politics and the New Yorkers
The New York Intellectuals and Hannah Arendt
Chapter 5
Race, Gender and Judaism: The
Eichmann Controversy as Case Study
Nazis and Sexuality
Racism, Sexism, and Jewish Masculinity
Assimilation as Gendered: The
Partisan Review Crowd Revisited
Jewish Women
The
Eichmann Controversy, Gender, and Judaism
Chapter 6
Transition
Thinking about
Eichmann
The Political Consequences of Thinking
Arendt as Jewish Gadfly
Chapter 7
Biblical and Rabbinic Approaches to Thinking
Thinking Like a Jew
The Bible
Talmud
Midrash
The Middle Ages
Mysticism
Jewish Historical Consciousness
Chapter 8
Greek and Hebrew: The Structure of Thinking
The Structure of Hebrew Thought Compared to Greek
Rabbinic Thought
Scaffolding
Chapter 9
Toward Understanding Arendt as a Jewish Thinker
A Jewish Soul in a German Scholar
The Political Trouble with Philosophy Warm-Up Exercise: An Impressionistic Reading of ‘Truth and Politics’
Chapter 10
The Pariah and Parvenu in
Thinking
Seeing and Hearing
Classical and Jewish Orthodoxy
Socrates as Pariah
The Wordly Results of Thinking
Chapter 11
Jewish Themes in Political Action and History
Judaism and the Space for Political Action
Judaism and Arendt’s Concept of History
Community in Dark Times
Chapter 12
Conclusion
Judaism
Gender
Appendix Reviews of Raul Hilberg’s The Destruction of the European Jews
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
Sobre o autor
Jennifer Ring is Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of Women’s Studies, University of Nevada, Reno, and has taught at Columbia University, Stanford University, the University of South Carolina, and the University of California at Berkeley. She is the author of
Modern Political Theory and Contemporary Feminism: A Dialectical Analysis, also published by SUNY Press.