Young-Bruehl, Elisabeth. Hannah Arendt. For Love of the World. Second Edition, Yale University Press, 2004.
152-3
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Dedications | Hannah Arendt | She and her husband planned The Origins of Totalitarianism at the most despairing period of their lives, while news filtered out of what was happening to the Jews in Europe, the extermination which is now... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Hannah Arendt | In 1937 HA
divorced Günther Stern
. In early spring 1936 she had met Heinrich Blücher
, a Communist, proletarian, Gentile exile. He was married at this time, but he and Arendt began living together... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Hannah Arendt | HA
's husband, Heinrich Blücher
, suffered a ruptured aneurysm in his brain in fall 1961, but made a good recovery. He was ill again in September 1963, and in spring 1968 he had several... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Hannah Arendt | HA
married her second husband, Heinrich Blücher
, in Paris, four months before they were both rounded up and interned (he for the second time). Young-Bruehl, Elisabeth. Hannah Arendt. For Love of the World. Second Edition, Yale University Press, 2004. 152-3 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Hannah Arendt | HA
's husband, Heinrich Blücher
, died of a heart attack at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York. He had had heart attacks before, but while they waited for the ambulance he told her: This is it. qtd. in Young-Bruehl, Elisabeth. Hannah Arendt. For Love of the World. Second Edition, Yale University Press, 2004. 431 |
Friends, Associates | Hannah Arendt | In Paris she moved in a circle of anti-Fascist exiles, including theorist Walter Benjamin
, novelist Hermann Broch
, and poet and philosopher Heinrich Blücher
, Dictionary of American Biography. Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1929–2024, 1-20. |
Literary responses | Hannah Arendt | On Revolution was comparatively little noticed at the time, overshadowed by HA
's book on Eichmann. It was, however, much read and studied in the mid and later 1960s, a time of the peace movement... |
Material Conditions of Writing | Hannah Arendt | Arendt proposed herself to the New Yorker as a reporter on this trial as soon as she heard in summer 1960 that Eichmann had been kidnapped in Argentina by Israeli agents. She then re-arranged her... |
Residence | Hannah Arendt | In October 1940, when Jews in occupied France were required to register with the local prefecture, HA
, her mother, and Heinrich Blücher
began the quest for the coveted, hard-to-obtain visas for the USA. In... |
Residence | Hannah Arendt | HA
and Heinrich Blücher
made their permanent home in New York. In 1951 they moved from small rooms on West 95th Street to 130 Morningside Drive, between Columbia University and Harlem. In their final... |
Residence | Hannah Arendt | HA
and Heinrich Blücher
landed in New York as refugees, to begin life anew with twenty-five dollars cash and an allowance of seventy dollars a month from the Zionist Organization of America
. Arendt's first... |
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