'''The Origins of Totalitarianism''' is a book by
Hannah Arendt which classed
Nazism and
Stalinism as
totalitarian movements.
It was recognized upon its
1951 publication as the comprehensive account of its subject, and was later hailed as a classic by the
Times Literary Supplement.
This
book continues to be one of the definitive philosophical analyses of
totalitarianism, at least in its 20th century form.
Arendt dedicated the book to her husband
Heinrich Blücher.
The book begins with the rise of
Anti-Semitism in
Central and
Western Europe in the early and mid 19th century and continues with an examination of the
New Imperialism period from
1884 to the outbreak of
World War I. Although
Arthur de Gobineau's ''
An Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races'' (1853-55) constitutes the first elaboration of "
biological racism", as opposed to
Boulainvilliers' anti-
patriotic and anti-
nationalist racism, Hannah Arendt traces the emergence of modern
racism as an
ideology in the
Boers' population, starting in particular during the
Great Trek in the first half of the 19th century, and qualifies it as an "ideological weapon for imperialism". Along with
bureaucracy, which was experimented according to her in
Egypt by
Lord Cromer, racism was the main trait of
colonialist imperialism, itself characterized by its unlimited
expansion (as illustrated by
Cecil Rhodes). This unlimited expansion necessarily opposed itself to the
nation-state, which by definition was territorially limited. In the last part of the section on imperialism, Arendt then examines "continental imperialism" (
pangermanism and
panslavism) and the emergence of "movements" substituting themselves to the
political parties. These movements were all
antiparliamentarist and began to instrumentalize antisemitism. Beside, they all tended to be against the
state, submitting the state to the mythified conception of "Race". Thus, Hannah Arendt reached the unexpected conclusion that Italian
fascism remained a
nationalist authoritarian movement, which glorified the state, while she considered
nazism to be closer to
stalinism as both were totalitarian movements which aimed at destroying the state. Finally, she pointed to the explosion of the problem of ethnic
minorities and of
refugees following the first war. As
stateless persons, refugees were deprived of
civil rights and, by consequence, of
human rights, since the 1789
Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen had linked together
national sovereignty and human rights.
The final section discusses the
institutions and operations of
totalitarian movements, focusing on what Arendt argues were the two genuine forms of totalitarian government in the first half of the twentieth century —
Nazi Germany and
Stalinist Russia. Here, Arendt discusses the transformation of
classes into masses, the role of
propaganda in dealing with the non-totalitarian world, and the use of terror, essential to this form of
government. In the concluding chapter, added in the second edition of the book in
1958, Arendt analyzes the nature of individual
isolation and loneliness as preconditions for total
domination.
''
National Review'' ranked the book #15 in its 100 Best Non-Fiction Books of the 20th Century list
[1]. The
Intercollegiate Studies Institute also listed it among the 50 best non-fiction books of the 20th century
[2].
Publisher: Harcourt; New edition (
March 1,
1973) (ISBN 0-15-670153-7)
See also
★
John A. Hobson's ''
Imperialism'' (1902)