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Hannah Arendt

A Life of the Mind

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Hannah Arendt

By: Thomas Meyer, Shelley Frisch - translator
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The long-awaited and revelatory biography of Hannah Arendt — one of the greatest philosophers of the twentieth century — and the story of an intellectual icon whose character and ideas continue to captivate and challenge us to this day.

Born in Germany in 1906 to a Jewish family, Hannah Arendt became a chronicler able to translate personal experience into concise analysis; an analytical thinker who wrested from Plato, Kant, and Heidegger that which seemed eternal yet was of the utmost contemporary relevance; a free spirit who felt an obligation only to her friends, her lovers, and the truth. Arendt's mode of thinking and the sheer range of her interlocutors and influences form an intellectual panorama of the twentieth century that is unparalleled. For her entire life, she refused to think within boundaries — her teachers, friends, and intellectual allies included Heidegger, Bultmann, Mannheim, Brecht, and Benjamin, to name but a few.

Drawing on newly discovered archival materials and previously overlooked documents in both Germany and the USA, Thomas Meyer traces Arendt's journey from Königsberg to Paris — where she fled after being imprisoned in 1933 — and finally to New York in 1941, illuminating her formative years and the development of her radical and brilliant books, as well as her famous affair and lifelong philosophical debate with Martin Heidegger, whose Nazism was a permanent challenge to her.

Woman, friend, lover, journalist, Jew, human rights activist, philosopher and political theorist, Arendt continues to exert fascination as both icon and thinker. Meyer's biography centres on two pivotal phases: Arendt's years in Paris after fleeing Nazi Germany, and her time in the United States leading up to the landmark publication of The Origins of Totalitarianism in 1951. It was her coverage of the trial of Adolf Eichmann in Jerusalem in 1961, however, that would make her world-famous — and notorious. Her coining of the phrase *the banality of evil* to describe the Nazi bureaucrat who had helped orchestrate the Holocaust remains one of the most debated and resonant formulations in modern thought, as controversial today as when she first wrote it.

The result is not only a meticulous reconstruction of an extraordinary life but a compelling invitation to rethink her legacy for our own troubled times. At a moment of acute political polarisation, with liberalism in crisis and urgent debates about freedom, responsibility, and truth unfolding all around us, Arendt's ideas resonate more powerfully than ever — and this magnificent biography restores to us the full complexity of the woman behind them.

©2026 Thomas Meyer, Shelley Frisch
20th Century Military Modern Philosophers Politicians Politics & Activism Professionals & Academics Women
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Critic reviews

‘Thomas Meyer has succeeded in writing a completely surprising biography of an intellectual icon, bringing us closer than ever before to her painful struggle for the lives of others’ Peter Neumann, Die Zeit
‘Hannah Arendt, one of the most vital philosophers of the twentieth century, gets the vital biography she has long deserved. Deeply researched and smartly written, this is an important history that, like Arendt's own work, is all but certain to stand the test of time’ Jonathan Eig, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for King: A Life
‘Here is Arendt as we've never seen her before — full of questions and wonder at a world as cruel as it is captivating. The iconic thinker is, at long last, neither saint nor villain; she is finally human, contradictions and all’ James McAuley, author of The House of Fragile Things
‘No person interested in Arendt's work should miss this book’ Liliane Weissberg, editor of the critical edition of Rahel Varnhagen: The Life of a Jewess
‘This thoroughly documented yet elegantly written and deftly translated biography would have pleased its subject to no end — not because it is hagiographic, but because it respects the limits of archival research and allows its subject to remain elusive’ Michael Zank, author of Jerusalem: A Brief History
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