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Hannah Arendt's work inspires many to stand in solidarity against authoritarianism, racial or gender-based violence, climate change, and right-wing populism. But what if a careful analysis of her oeuvre reveals a darker side to this intellectual legacy? What if solidarity, as she conceives of it, is not oriented toward equality, freedom, or justice for all, but creates a barrier to intersectional coalition building?
In Arendt's Solidarity, David D. Kim illuminates Arendt's lifelong struggle with this deceptively straightforward yet divisive concept. Drawing upon her publications, unpublished documents, private letters, radio and television interviews, newspaper clippings, and archival marginalia, Kim examines how Arendt refutes solidarity as an effective political force against anti-Semitism, racial injustice, or social inequality. As Kim reveals, this conceptual conundrum follows the arc of Arendt's forced migration across the Atlantic and is directly related to every major concern of hers: Christian neighborly love, friendship, Jewish assimilation, Zionism, National Socialism, the American republic, Black Power, revolution, violence, and the human world. Kim places these thoughts in dialogue with dissenting voices, such as Thomas Mann, Gershom Scholem, Jean-Paul Sartre, James Baldwin, Frantz Fanon, James Forman, and Ralph Ellison. The result is a full-scale reinterpretation of Arendt's oeuvre.
—Samuel Moyn, Yale University
"This erudite and ambitious book offers an impassioned and rigorously documented account of 'how we read Arendt now.'"
—Michael P. Steinberg, Brown University
"Kim adeptly traces the evolution of Arendt's thinking from Augustinian love to her views on assimilation and beyond, highlighting her enduring focus on solidarity. As Kim illuminates, Arendt's oversights about black rage, decolonial love, and settler colonialism underscore her limitations."
—Priscilla Layne, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
"Arendt's Solidarity brings clarity to both Arendt's lifelong preoccupation with the problem of solidarity and the question of how we should think about solidarity. A major achievement."
—Rahel Jaeggi, Humboldt University of Berlin