
The World in Time / Lapham’s Quarterly Episode 9: Roger Berkowitz
Aug 1, 2025
Roger Berkowitz, a writer and academic director at the Hannah Arendt Center, takes a deep dive into the thoughts of Hannah Arendt and Henry David Thoreau on civil disobedience. He distinguishes between living under tyranny versus totalitarianism, emphasizing the necessity of political action for freedom. Their discussions illuminate the contrast between individual dissent and collective action. Berkowitz also reflects on Arendt's critical views of American politics and the role of citizen assemblies in promoting active democracy.
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How Berkowitz Became An Arendt Scholar
- Roger Berkowitz recounts learning Arendt at Amherst and later teaching Origins of Totalitarianism at Bard, which transformed his view of her work.
- His Bard conference led to taking over the Hannah Arendt Center and deep study of her writings.
Loneliness Fuels Mass Movements
- In Origins of Totalitarianism Arendt links antisemitism, imperialism, and mass politics as drivers of 20th-century totalitarianism.
- She sees mass loneliness and loss of meaning as the psychological soil for movements like Nazism and Bolshevism.
America As A Non-Nation-State Ideal
- Arendt viewed America as a non-nation-state ideal where hyphenated identities could coexist within constitutional republicanism.
- She studied the founders to see the Constitution as a structural guard against sovereign dominance.
















