In the Name of Humanity Reflections on the Twentieth Century
- Binding: Hardcover
- Edition: 2
- Publisher: Columbia Univ Pr
- Publish date: 12/01/1999
Finkielkraut maintains that one can no longer express unqualified enthusiasm for the Enlightenment idea of universal man, something that he himself had done in earlier works. Echoing Hannah Arendt, he now asks, as she did in The Origins of Totalitarianism: How was it possible for a great philosophical tradition, celebrated for affirming the unity of mankind, to end up inspiring a political system of such dehumanizing proportions? In order to grasp the magnitude of the question, Finkielkraut contrasts eyewitness accounts with ideological justifications of the mechanized carnage of World War I, the horror of concentration camps (in their Nazi and Soviet manifestations), and ethnic cleansing campaigns today in many parts of the world. He also reveals in humiliating detail how inadequate, even useless, our "humanitarian" responses to these atrocities have been, rehearsing the sad choices international organizations have faced as they try to minimize the starvation and pain of millions of people.
As this "despotic century" draws to a close, Finkielkraut cheers the downfall of Soviet Communism but warns that totalitarian thinking is still with us. The last chapters of the book offer a penetrating analysis of the ongoing plight of displaced persons and of thestruggles endured by small nations. Finkielkraut then presents a bitter critique of globalization and the uses being made of information technology. Is there any hope? Perhaps, he suggests, if modern man embraces what Hannah Arendt has called a "fundamental gratitude" for existence.
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