Hannah Arendt and concentration camps. An image of hell

Authors

  • Mariela Cecilia Avila Universidad de Santiago de Chile

Keywords:

Concentration camp, H. Arendt, Political philosophy, Totalitarianism

Abstract

This article deals with Hannah Arendt´s work on Second World War concentration and extermination camps, which she considers the main institution of organized power. Her analysis focuses on concentration camps as life-size experiments on human beings’ lives, whereby it is made clear that anything can happen. This article highlights the author’s philosophical perspective on this subject, which presents these spaces of exception as involving a hiatus in the public sphere and therefore annihilating the possibility of political practice.

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Author Biography

Mariela Cecilia Avila, Universidad de Santiago de Chile


Universidad de Santiago de Chile
Instituto de Estudios Avanzados
Román Díaz 89, Providencia (Chile)

Published

2018-11-22

How to Cite

Avila, M. C. (2018). Hannah Arendt and concentration camps. An image of hell. ALPHA. Revista De Artes, Letras Y Filosofía, 1(39), 177–187. Retrieved from https://revistas.ulagos.cl/index.php/alpha/article/view/1675

Issue

Section

Articles