Origins of Totalitarianism: Difference between revisions

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She asserted that the Total State has five characteristics: A leader with absolute power; a dogmatic ideology; a single mass party; a police dedicated to the ideology and willing to use terror against the people; and control and vigorous use of media for propaganda.   
She asserted that the Total State has five characteristics: A leader with absolute power; a dogmatic ideology; a single mass party; a police dedicated to the ideology and willing to use terror against the people; and control and vigorous use of media for propaganda.   


Under the ideology and party, institutions such as education, church, and law become politicized.
Under the ideology and party, institutions such as education, church, and law become politicized.[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]

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The Origins of Totalitarianism was a 1948 book by Hannah Arendt. She argued that patterns of anti-Semitic ideology, coupled with European imperialism and nationalism, generated a new political ideology: the total state.

The argument is very interpretative and has incited much criticism from historians since its publication.

She asserted that the Total State has five characteristics: A leader with absolute power; a dogmatic ideology; a single mass party; a police dedicated to the ideology and willing to use terror against the people; and control and vigorous use of media for propaganda.

Under the ideology and party, institutions such as education, church, and law become politicized.