Eichmann en Jerusalén

Paperback, 448 pages

Spanish language

Published Feb. 28, 2005 by Debolsillo.

OCLC Number:
758153731

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5 stars (4 reviews)

Una obra que sigue siendo uno de los mejores estudios sobre el Holocausto. Filósofa alemana de origen judío, nombre imprescindible para entender el siglo veinte, Hannah Arendt estudia la cuestión judía y las razones del fenómeno nazi, a partir del juicio que en 1961 se llevó a cabo en Israel contra Adolf Eichmann.

32 editions

Some lengthy notes on Eichmann in Jerusalem with Gaza in mind

5 stars

I’ve read this book after finishing Berlant, and my first emotion towards it has been relief. Arendt write in such a clear and engaging way. The first chapters have an almost reportage-like style (the book did at first appear in The New Yorker), whilst later in the book she turns towards a persuasive / essay-ish tone. Throughout, she is concerned with keeping a constant pace, using precise and understandable words, and avoiding all rhetoric - clearly triggered by the style of both the accused and the prosecution in the Eichmann trial. Vite scadenti, mitologie eroiche (a sentence I saw attributed, in Italian, to Susan Sonntag).

In preparation to reading the book, I listened to a The Dig episode on the book 'The rights to have rights', which takes as a starting point Arendt's thinking on human rights to discuss migrant rights today. The authors (Astra Taylor and Stephanie de …

Subjects

  • Jewish Holocaust
  • History
  • Philosophy
  • Spanish: Adult Nonfiction
  • General
  • Holocaust