Violence and Power in Hannah Arendt

Hannah Arendt rejects the correlation of politics and violence by disputing that violence is not essentially intrinsic to the political. Violence and power are not identical. Power is instinctively configured by combined and mutual functioning of the multiplicity and differences of citizens. Violenc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Prayer Elmo Raj
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Islamic University, Islamabad 2020-02-01
Series:Journal of Contemporary Poetics
Online Access:http://irigs.iiu.edu.pk:64447/ojs/index.php/jcp/article/view/764
_version_ 1797788171304435712
author Prayer Elmo Raj
author_facet Prayer Elmo Raj
author_sort Prayer Elmo Raj
collection DOAJ
description Hannah Arendt rejects the correlation of politics and violence by disputing that violence is not essentially intrinsic to the political. Violence and power are not identical. Power is instinctively configured by combined and mutual functioning of the multiplicity and differences of citizens. Violence is aphasic, that which aims to detach the citizens by interrupting the civic borders binding them in their deeds. Power is self-binding because it consolidates political agents and public space. However, violence is solely instrumental because it aims to accomplish a defunctive end through force. Power engenders the institution of a “transitory consensus” instigating the opportunity of contention and conflict but violence is catastrophic, incompetent of being creative. Arendt examines how politics has been mutated into violence. In order to consider politics as violence, one has to challenge the complementary correspondence of politics and violence. Countries that press on preventive wars press themselves as good fighting against the evil so as to redeem the future and humanity. To arrive at these goals, countries break international agreements asserting economic and political dominance in an uneven world. While terrorists use violence to destroy their enemies, the use of nuclear and biological weapons by the states could extinguish the entire humanity. States enforce stringent policies against immigrants, refugees and justice movements that coordinate the unemployed, displaced, homeless and the rejected sections of the society. This paper is an attempt to critically examine Arendt’s speculations on the interconnection between power and violence and the implications of Arendt’s theory in the context of global violence. Keywords: Power, Violence, Arendt, Political, Action
first_indexed 2024-03-13T01:32:49Z
format Article
id doaj.art-34e54ea52cd34d8a9e956e0a653980ec
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2521-5728
2788-7359
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-13T01:32:49Z
publishDate 2020-02-01
publisher International Islamic University, Islamabad
record_format Article
series Journal of Contemporary Poetics
spelling doaj.art-34e54ea52cd34d8a9e956e0a653980ec2023-07-04T06:41:51ZengInternational Islamic University, IslamabadJournal of Contemporary Poetics2521-57282788-73592020-02-011110.54487/jcp.v1i1.764764Violence and Power in Hannah ArendtPrayer Elmo Raj0Assistant Professor, PG & Research, Department of English, Pachaiyappa’s College, Chennai-30Hannah Arendt rejects the correlation of politics and violence by disputing that violence is not essentially intrinsic to the political. Violence and power are not identical. Power is instinctively configured by combined and mutual functioning of the multiplicity and differences of citizens. Violence is aphasic, that which aims to detach the citizens by interrupting the civic borders binding them in their deeds. Power is self-binding because it consolidates political agents and public space. However, violence is solely instrumental because it aims to accomplish a defunctive end through force. Power engenders the institution of a “transitory consensus” instigating the opportunity of contention and conflict but violence is catastrophic, incompetent of being creative. Arendt examines how politics has been mutated into violence. In order to consider politics as violence, one has to challenge the complementary correspondence of politics and violence. Countries that press on preventive wars press themselves as good fighting against the evil so as to redeem the future and humanity. To arrive at these goals, countries break international agreements asserting economic and political dominance in an uneven world. While terrorists use violence to destroy their enemies, the use of nuclear and biological weapons by the states could extinguish the entire humanity. States enforce stringent policies against immigrants, refugees and justice movements that coordinate the unemployed, displaced, homeless and the rejected sections of the society. This paper is an attempt to critically examine Arendt’s speculations on the interconnection between power and violence and the implications of Arendt’s theory in the context of global violence. Keywords: Power, Violence, Arendt, Political, Actionhttp://irigs.iiu.edu.pk:64447/ojs/index.php/jcp/article/view/764
spellingShingle Prayer Elmo Raj
Violence and Power in Hannah Arendt
Journal of Contemporary Poetics
title Violence and Power in Hannah Arendt
title_full Violence and Power in Hannah Arendt
title_fullStr Violence and Power in Hannah Arendt
title_full_unstemmed Violence and Power in Hannah Arendt
title_short Violence and Power in Hannah Arendt
title_sort violence and power in hannah arendt
url http://irigs.iiu.edu.pk:64447/ojs/index.php/jcp/article/view/764
work_keys_str_mv AT prayerelmoraj violenceandpowerinhannaharendt