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]] |
Latest revision as of 16:00, 29 September 2024
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.