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Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil Paperback – January 1, 1994

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 2,013 ratings

Provides a report on the trial of Nazi leader Adolf Eichmann, including facts that were exposed after the trial, and presents Arendt's commentary on the controversy created by the report.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

While living in Argentina in 1960, Nazi leader Adolf Eichmann was kidnapped and smuggled to Israel where he was put on trial for crimes against humanity. The New Yorker magazine sent Hannah Arendt to cover the trial. While covering the technical aspects of the trial, Arendt also explored the wider themes inherent in the trial, such as the nature of justice, the behavior of the Jewish leadership during the Nazi Régime, and, most controversially, the nature of Evil itself.

Far from being evil incarnate, as the prosecution painted Eichmann, Arendt maintains that he was an average man, a petty bureaucrat interested only in furthering his career, and the evil he did came from the seductive power of the totalitarian state and an unthinking adherence to the Nazi cause. Indeed, Eichmann's only defense during the trial was "I was just following orders."

Arendt's analysis of the seductive nature of evil is a disturbing one. We would like to think that anyone who would perpetrate such horror on the world is different from us, and that such atrocities are rarities in our world. But the history of groups such as the Jews, Kurds, Bosnians, and Native Americans, to name but a few, seems to suggest that such evil is all too commonplace. In revealing Eichmann as the pedestrian little man that he was, Arendt shows us that the veneer of civilization is a thin one indeed.

Review

If, in recalling the period, one could shut one's eyes to the scenes of brutal massacre and stop one's ears to the screams of horror-stricken women and terrorized children as they saw the tornado of death sweeping toward them, one could almost assume that in some parts of the book the author is being whimsical. -- The New York Times Book Review

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin Classics; 60814th edition (January 1, 1994)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 312 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0140187650
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0140187656
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 8 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.1 x 0.37 x 7.72 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 2,013 ratings

About the author

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Hannah Arendt
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Hannah Arendt (1906-1975) taught political science and philosophy at The New School for Social Research in New York and the University of Chicago. Widely acclaimed as a brilliant and original thinker, her works include Eichmann in Jerusalem and The Human Condition.


Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
2,013 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book insightful, educational, and interesting. They say it's well worth the read and has great historical value. Opinions are mixed on the writing style, with some finding it well-written and precise, while others say it's hard to read and needlessly wordy.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

62 customers mention "Insight"58 positive4 negative

Customers find the perspectives in the book broad, insightful, and educational. They say the topic is apt given the current political climate. Readers also mention the book is full of clear thinking and rational discussion.

"Arendt's 'Eichmann in Jerusalem' is a fascinating study at multiple levels...." Read more

"...not agree with all of Arendt's positions or arguments, this is an important work from both journalistic and philosophical viewpoints...." Read more

"...The book is instructive in just the way the title suggests - how a society can take the murdering of millions of people to the banal, the..." Read more

"...This book "offers the most striking insight into the totality of the moral collapse the Nazis caused in respectable European society - not only in..." Read more

35 customers mention "Value for money"35 positive0 negative

Customers find the book well worth the read, saying it's an excellent, great book on the trial. They also say it's interesting, and worth reading into legal, moral, and philosophical questions. Readers mention the book is first-rate, intelligent, and hard-driving.

"...It is a must read." Read more

"...Tough reading but well worth the effort." Read more

"...It is a first rate, intelligent, hard driving analysis...." Read more

"...This is a valuable book that gives light about a decisive event of human history." Read more

18 customers mention "Historical value"18 positive0 negative

Customers find the book profoundly historical, timeless, and chillingly realistic. They say it's shocking and spine-chilling to see how ordinary people like Eichmann were able to commit such crimes.

"...It also is frighteningly real for today's world. I know that alone will scare most as well as any haunted house they go through...." Read more

"...It is chilling because of the details you learn about how the Germans handled the "Jewish problem" in the 1930's and 40's...." Read more

"This is a masterpiece if only because it is a historical document of great importance that has a great deal of depth as well...." Read more

"...German having taught history in the US for decades, the book represents an historic angle that I have not experienced in years...." Read more

9 customers mention "Pacing"9 positive0 negative

Customers find the book dense, solid, and large. They say it's a tough but necessary read that offers invaluable lessons about personal life. Readers also appreciate the good reporting and highly credible reports. In addition, they describe the analysis of the trial as excellent and highly professional.

"...The reports were highly credible, comming from Polish and Swiss businessmen...." Read more

"...It's a tough but necessary read - offering invaluable lessons about personal responsibility, ethics, and the dark corners of human capability...." Read more

"A very dense and insightful discussion of Adolph Eichman and Nazi Germany as written by a member of the Jewish intelligentsia who sat through the..." Read more

"Excellent and highly professional analisis of the trial and all the irregularities on it...." Read more

28 customers mention "Writing style"18 positive10 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the writing style. Some find it well-written, precise, and well-narrated. They also say it's easy to read and well-documented. However, others say the writing is hard to read and needlessly wordy.

"A very controversial book when it came out. Author makes many good points and it is meticulously researched and written." Read more

"...At first, it was difficult to read. Not because of the subject matter but of the author's writing style and the sheer density of the material...." Read more

"...Hannah Arendt is exacting and detailed. She is a gifted journalist and an insightful philosopher...." Read more

"...I loved it, it is easy to read, eventhough the theme carries a lot of philosophical concepts." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on September 20, 2011
Arendt's 'Eichmann in Jerusalem' is a fascinating study at multiple levels. Her knowledge of the history and bureaucracy of the Haolocaust is amazing in and of itself. Her knowledge of Eichmann's participation is also fascinating. At the same time, while not questioning the justice of Eichmann's execution, she is rightly critical--even contemptuous--of the kidnapping and the two years long 'legal' prosecution of Eichmann. At one point she actually denies that her work is a study on the nature of evil but, in my opinion, the totality of Arendt's work is--whether she intended it herself--is precisely a study of a PARTICULAR kind of evil. The subtitle of the book, 'The Banality of Evil', is a fair summation of Arendt's opinion.

Eichmann, in fact, was relatively small-fry in terms of the policies and philosophies of Nazi genocide. He was an apparachnik, no more, no less. He definitely wasn't the 'sadistic killer' the Jerusalem court adjudged him to be. He wasn't even particularly anti-semitic and he wasn't by nature either a torturer or murderer. He was the perfect gear in a complex, illogical and totally cynical machine. If the Nazi political machine had been 'good'-- if it had genuinely tried to help the Jews and all other peoples--Eichmann would have performed his 'good' role with equal dedication and skill. If the system had required Eichmann to perform the role of a Mother Theresa, Eichmann would have tried to prove himself the ideal saint.

Success, order, social standing and acceptance were the gods Eichmann worshipped. With some truth, Eichmann complained that his Nazi leaders misused Eichmann's highest qualities Initially his job was relatively--ahhh--banal. He was to help get Jews out of Germany, sometimes to Palestine, itself. If things had stopped at this point, Eichmann would now be regarded as something of a pro-Zionist. Things, however, didn't stop there and the system gradually, gradually, gradually morphed into an incomparable killing machine. Eichmann morphed right along with it.

Still this is a small part of the story and couldn't justify the Israel's fracturing of international law to kidnap such a non-entity in Buenos Aires. On the face of it, Eichmann simply wasn't worth it. Ben Gurion must have known it but reckoned that Eichmann--and a 'trial' against Eichman--could serve Israeli purposes. Eichmann wasn't the point of the trial. The TRIAL was the purpose of the trial. Eichmann's presence afforded the prosecutors to--once again once--bring forth the voluminous evidence of the Nazi genocidal atrocity. Most of the 'evidence' had absolutely nothing to do with Eichmann. It was an Israeli effort to gain 'justice', publicity and sympathy for the Jewish plight and Israeli survival. As such, it certainly didn't end with Eichmann's death. 'We must never forget', declared Simon Wiesenthal, as he hunted down Nazi war criminals. But what if we run out of 'war criminals'? What happens--as it has already happened--that they are all captured, punished or, especially dead of old age? The category of 'war criminal' therefore reaches downward to young guards drafted into service of a criminal regime. What happens when even these are gone?

No matter. Who are the guilty? Is an Eichmann or even a Heydrich, more evil than Ted Bundy? Bundy--up close and personal--kidnapped, raped, slowly tortured and murdured dozens of young women. Bundy gained physical pleasure and gratification in acts that unquestionably would have made even the most Jew-hating Nazi sick to his stomach. Eichmann, Heydrich and many, many others certainly did more harm, in a numerical sense, than did Bundy. So is evil a function of numbers? Is a person who kills ten people less evil than a person who kills ten thousand? Is a Communist who expedites the murder of an entire class of people, such as the Kulaks of the Soviet Union, less evil than a person who expedites the murder of ethnic groups in Nazi-occupied Europe?

At the same time it can be argued that Bundy and all those like him are 'sick' which somehow moderates the enormity of their crimes. Then again, how do we know they are 'sick'? Does the nature of the crime define mental illness? If so, maybe Hitler, Himmler, Heydrich and Eichmann were simply diseased souls--victims of their heredities and environments--who simply couldn't help themselves when presented with a certain set of circumstances. Maybe none of us are ultimately responsible for anything. I don't know but I do know that any society that adopts this nihilist philosophy--which many 'liberal' western societies have toyed with--the world is genuinely lost.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 20, 2024
WWII would have had a different outcome, I think, had Germany not focused on its "manufactured cultural and political enemies".
Reviewed in the United States on July 12, 2012
While I do not agree with all of Arendt's positions or arguments, this is an important work from both journalistic and philosophical viewpoints. While the reader expecting to understand Eichmann to the same degree that a reader of Albert Speer: His Battle with Truth will come to understand Speer (which is not surprising given Arendt's lack of first-hand access to Eichmann) will be disappointed, the reader is still left with a vivid impression of Eichmann's 'ordinariness' and 'thoughtlessness' rather than an inaccurate picture of a sadistic genius. As an account of the trial, I find Arendt's account of the flaws in both prosecution and defence cases and the essentially fair-minded and objective conduct of the presiding judges in an (justifiably) emotionally-charged environment convincing and compelling.

It appears, however, that Arendt could not completely make up her mind as to whether this trial should have been a narrowly-focused prosecution of Eichmann alone (a position which informs her best criticisms of the conduct of the trial) or a wider inquest into the Holocaust as a whole (which seems to shape her searching questions on the role of Jewish leadership and the relative lack or organised resistance). Her views on the appropriateness of an Israeli court hearing the charges against Eichmann as opposed to an (at the time non-existent) international tribunal appear - from today's perspective, where almost a generation after the end of the Cold War the International Criminal Court is still of limited influence and effectiveness in trying cases of this nature. her arguments on this issue reminded me of Orwell's observations on HG Wells utopian plea to remove airpower from the hands of nation-states in the 1930's in ('Wells, Hitler and the World State', in Fifty Orwell Essays [linked table of contents]) - whatever their merits, there was little prospect of at her proposals being adopted to deliver a satisfactory outcome. In her postscript, (written some time after the original draft), Arendt observes that states may at times be compelled to commit actions that can be regarded as 'criminal' to ensure the survival of lawfulness - I would suggest that submitting Eichmann to trial in Jerusalem (and for that matter, the trials of the Nazi leadership at Nuremberg) met that description, and at least secured appropriate outcomes even if not representative of the most desirable legal process.

Perhaps the true lesson of Eichmann's trial and Arendt's account is not that evil is always banal, but that as Arendt states 'Justice, but not mercy, is a matter of judgement", and that civilised and decent people need to be prepared to stand in judgement of evil (and even better, continue to debate exactly what a more perfect justice should look like) rather than follow the temptation of simply granting 'mercy' as a means of dealing with the unthinkable.
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Top reviews from other countries

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Debussy 56
5.0 out of 5 stars the banality of evil
Reviewed in Canada on January 17, 2024
masterpiece on 20th century evil
Client d'Amazon
5.0 out of 5 stars masterpiece
Reviewed in France on March 13, 2022
History, philosophy, moral, and laws converging but still unable to explain and properly judge. This is a masterpiece forever. Strongly reccomended in difficult times!
POM
4.0 out of 5 stars Una lectura obligada
Reviewed in Spain on April 5, 2021
Un despliegue de erudición sobre un hecho histórico redactado independientemente. Buena prosa, tintes irónicos en la descripción de la tragedia de la solución final. La ironía le fue criticada mucho a la autora, pero la misma no es falta de respeto con las víctimas de la barbarie ni condescendencia con los asesinos. Por el contrario, el tinte irónico de algunos pasajes nace de poner de manifiesto los absurdos que acompañaron la gestación de todo este proceso por parte de los nazis y su posterior enjuiciamiento por las potencias vencedoras y el estado de Israel.
Carol
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic analysis of a complex issue.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 6, 2021
I first read this book over 30 years ago and found it heavy going even then. But a book discussing the Eichmann trial, with all it's complexities, was never going to be a light read. Unlike other reviewers I did not view Arendt as a "self hating Jew", but an incisive thinker who was not afraid to weigh up the evidence (all from public record) and openly and honestly discuss them in this book. That's not to say that I agreed with everything she stated, but she certainly made me think about the notions of guilt and innocence and personal, as apposed to state, responsibilty.

If you want a book that only describes the monstrous deeds of the Holocaust, as well as Eichmann's role in it, this is not the book for you. Arendt discusses not just Eichmann's role, but the role other people and organisations had in this "catastrophe". A discussion some people, even to this day, find unpalatable.

I am glad that I have read this book again, as with age (and I hope maturity), I got much more from it than I did all those years ago. In the political climate of 2021 there are parallels with 1920's and 1930's Europe and the rise of populist politicians who don't allow the facts to 'get in the way of a good story'. Let's hope the lessons learned all those years ago are not forgotten and history does not repeat itself!
Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Should we put up with evil?
Reviewed in Brazil on September 4, 2019
Arendt shows how we do, when we shouln't. It was the case of the Germans during the Hollocaust, it was legal. The book is also History, it is a report on the Eichmann jugement.