Abstract
The social theorist Theodor W. Adorno (1903–1969) delivered his
lecture “The Meaning of ‘Working through the Past’” [“Was bedeutet:
‘Aufarbeitung der Vergangenheit?’”] at a conference for educators in
Wiesbaden on November 9, 1959. The event had been organized by the
Coordination Council for Christian-Jewish Cooperation [Koordinierungsrat
für Chistlich-Jüdische Zusammenarbeit]. At the time, West Germany was
experiencing a wave of antisemitic attacks against synagogues and Jewish
community institutions. In his lecture, Adorno reflected on the meaning
of “coming to terms with the past” in postwar Germany and warned that
Nazi crimes could only be “worked through” if the root causes that led
to the rise of the Third Reich and the Holocaust were eliminated. Adorno
was a key influence on the West German student movement, which also
demanded a more pointed and honest confrontation with the German Nazi
past. The photograph below shows Adorno during a lecture at Goethe
University in Frankfurt am Main in 1963.