Orr, Steven Ray Shadbolt2014-08-292014-08-2920142014-08-29http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5638This thesis examines Hannah Arendt's vita activa in the context of the contemporary political world that is marked by the inclusion of a variety of beings beyond mere human plurality. Understanding that Arendt's work is in opposition to the isolating tendencies of philosophical and bureaucratic thought, I look to the processes of labor and work as methods by which togetherness and worldliness can be recovered. Beginning with Richard Sennett's The Craftsman and Vanessa Lemm's Nietzsche's Animal Philosophy, I draw out a common thread in projects that consider non-human actors as capable of politicking: endurance. Building upon Arendt's work in The Human Condition and On Violence, I suggest that the vita diutina, the enduring life, and the three deaths of being serve as a useful ways of understanding already ongoing political projects that include non-human beings.enHannah Arendtexcluded bodiesenduranceviolencepolitical theoryworldlinessmemoryvita activaPolitics as Endurance: Hannah Arendt and the Three Deaths of BeingThesisAvailable to the World Wide Web