Stranger from Abroad: Hannah Arendt, Martin Heidegger, Friendship and Forgiveness
Book Details
Author(s)Daniel Maier-Katkin
PublisherW. W. Norton & Company
ISBN / ASINB003DE1DII
ISBN-13978B003DE1DI6
MarketplaceFrance 🇫🇷
Description
Two titans of twentieth-century thought: their lives, loves, ideas, and politics.
Shaking up the content and method by which generations of students had studied Western philosophy, Martin Heidegger sought to enoble Man’s existence in relation to Death. Yet in a time of crisis, he sought personal advancement, becoming the most prominent German intellectual to join the Nazis.
Hannah Arendt, his brilliant, beautiful student and young lover, sought to enable a decent society of human beings in relation to one other. She was courageous in the time of crisis. Years later, she was even able to forgive Heidegger and to find in his behavior an insight into Nazism that would influence her reflections on “the banality of evilâ€â€”a concept that remains bitterly controversial and profoundly influential to this day.
Eloquent and moving, Stranger from Abroad dramatizes some of the greatest questions of the twentieth century—revealing bonds connecting the personal, philosophical, and political, highlighting the responsibility of intellectuals in dark times.

