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Sleepwalker: Arendt, Thoughtlessness, and the Question of Little Eichmanns
Conference proceeding   Peer reviewed

Sleepwalker: Arendt, Thoughtlessness, and the Question of Little Eichmanns

Larry Busk and Philosophy Documentation Center
POWER, PROTEST, AND THE FUTURE OF DEMOCRACY, Vol.31, pp.53-69
Social Philosophy Today
01-01-2015

Abstract

Arts & Humanities Government & Law Philosophy Political Science Social Sciences
Academia is still feeling the echoes of a controversy that emerged in 2005 over an essay by Ward Churchill, former professor at the University of Colorado, in which he refers to (certain) victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks as "little Eichmanns." While there have been many (violent) condemnations and (limited) defenses of the piece, there has been little discussion of what the term "little Eichmann" actually means. This paper analyzes the incendiary remark in the context of its reference, the work of Hannah Arendt. Read in this light, it ceases to be a simple defamation and becomes a momentous intellectual challenge.

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