Today’s episode is about a momentous trial and the incendiary book that followed: the trial was of Adolf Eichmann, convicted by an Israeli court in 1961 of orchestrating the Holocaust, and the book was Hannah Arendt’s Eichmann in Jerusalem (1963), which questioned the grounds on which he was prosecuted. What did Arendt mean by ‘the banality of evil’? Why was she convinced that the case against Eichmann was badly misjudged? Was the trial really intended to serve as a history lesson? And if it was, what was it designed to teach?

Next time in Politics on Trial: Nelson Mandela vs Apartheid
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Past Present Future

David Runciman

Politics on Trial: Eichmann in Jerusalem

DEC 10, 202565 MIN
Past Present Future

Politics on Trial: Eichmann in Jerusalem

DEC 10, 202565 MIN

Description

Today’s episode is about a momentous trial and the incendiary book that followed: the trial was of Adolf Eichmann, convicted by an Israeli court in 1961 of orchestrating the Holocaust, and the book was Hannah Arendt’s Eichmann in Jerusalem (1963), which questioned the grounds on which he was prosecuted. What did Arendt mean by ‘the banality of evil’? Why was she convinced that the case against Eichmann was badly misjudged? Was the trial really intended to serve as a history lesson? And if it was, what was it designed to teach?

Next time in Politics on Trial: Nelson Mandela vs Apartheid

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices