Friendship and the Public Stage: Revisiting Hannah Arendt's Resistance to “Political Education”
Abstract
Hannah Arendt's essays about the 1957 crisis over efforts of a group of youth, the “Little Rock Nine,” to desegregate a high school in Little Rock, Arkansas, reveal a tension in her vision of the “public.” In this article Aaron Schutz and Marie Sandy look closely at the experiences of the youth desegregating the school, especially those of Elizabeth Eckford, drawing upon them to trace a continuum of forms of public engagement in Arendt's work. This ranges from arenas of “deliberative friendship,” where unique individuals collaborate on common efforts, to a more conflictual “public stage,” where groups act in solidarity to change aspects of the public world. While Arendt famously asserted in her essay “The Crisis in Education” that political capacities should not be taught in schools, it makes more sense to see this argument as focused on what she sometimes called the conflictual “public stage,” reflecting the experience of the Little Rock Nine. In contrast, Schutz and Sandy argue that Arendt's own work implies that “deliberative friendship,” as described in her essay “Philosophy and Politics” and elsewhere, should be part of everyday practices in classrooms and schools.
Number of times cited: 5
- LOVISA BERGDAHL and ELISABET LANGMANN, ‘Where are You?’ Giving Voice to the Teacher by Reclaiming the Private/Public Distinction, Journal of Philosophy of Education, 51, 2, (461-475), (2017).
- Daniel Brennan, Considering the Public Private-Dichotomy: Hannah Arendt, Václav Havel and Victor Klemperer on the Importance of the Private, Human Studies, 40, 2, (249), (2017).
- Emile Bojesen, Education at the margins of the political, Pedagogy, Culture & Society, 25, 3, (447), (2017).
- Ramona Mihăilă, Gheorghe H. Popescu and Elvira Nica, Educational Conservatism and Democratic Citizenship in Hannah Arendt, Educational Philosophy and Theory, 48, 9, (915), (2016).
- Morten Timmermann Korsgaard, An Arendtian perspective on inclusive education: towards a reimagined vocabulary, International Journal of Inclusive Education, 20, 9, (934), (2016).




