Rahel Varnhagen, Hannah Arendt
Rahel Varnhagen, Hannah Arendt
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Rahel Varnhagen
The Life of a Jewish Woman

Author: Hannah Arendt, Clara Winston, Richard Winston

Narrator: Suzanne Toren

Unabridged: 10 hr 28 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 01/25/2022


Synopsis

Rahel Varnhagen: The Life of a Jewish Woman is the biography of a remarkable, complicated, troubled, passionate woman, an important figure in German romanticism, the person who in a sense founded the Goethe cult that would become central to German cultural life in the nineteenth century, as well as someone who confronted with unusual determination and bore the burden of being both a woman in a man's world and an assimilated Jew in Germany.

Rahel Levin Varnhagen was, Arendt writes, "neither beautiful nor attractive . . . and possessed no talents with which to employ her extraordinary intelligence and passionate originality." Arendt sets out to tell the story of Rahel's life as Rahel might have told it and, in doing so, to reveal the way in which intellectual and social assimilation works out in one person's destiny.

On her deathbed Rahel is reported to have said, "The thing which all my life seemed to me the greatest shame, which was the misery and misfortune of my life—having been born a Jewess—this I should on no account now wish to have missed." Only because she had remained both a Jew and a pariah, Arendt observes, "did she find a place in the history of European humanity."

About Hannah Arendt

Hannah Arendt (1906-1975) was an influential German political theorist and philosopher who came to the United States as a refugee from the Nazis in 1940. She held a number of academic positions at American universities including the University of California, Berkeley; Northwestern University; the University of Chicago; and Princeton University, where she was the first woman appointed to a full professorship. Her works, which deal with issues of power, authority, revolution, thought, and judgment, include The Origins of Totalitarianism, The Human Condition, Eichmann in Jerusalem, Between Past and Future, and the incomplete and posthumously published The Life of the Mind.


Reviews

After reading “Rahel Varnhagen: The Life of a Jewess,” it wasn’t surprising to me why Hannah Arendt chose to write this book; they had a lot in common. Rahel Varnhagen née Levin was born in 1771 in Berlin in the Kingdom of Prussia. Despite this, Rahel was stateless—she was considered a foreigner bec......more

Goodreads review by Dan

Rahel is just a pretext for Arendt to denounce the failure of Enlightenment and Christianity vis-a-vis the Jews, to show that there is nothing new to antisemitism in Germany 100 years later, to meditate on the Jewish and woman condition, and to write her own story under a different name/pretext. In......more

Goodreads review by Mark

One of the most unusual biographies I have ever read, Arendt's account of a minor notable in Germany has intrigued me. She wrote most of the manuscript after leaving Nazi Germany without her passport--first fleeing to Paris, then being shipped to Gurs, then escaping the Concentration Camp to Switzer......more