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Publications [#350220] of Jakob Norberg

Articles/Essays/Chapters in Books

  1. Norberg, J. "Adorno and Postwar German Society." A Companion to Adorno. Ed. Gordon, P; Hammer, E; Pensky, M. Wiley-Blackwell, 2020. 335-348.
    (last updated on 2026/01/23)

    Abstract:
    From his return to Europe in 1949 to his death in 1969, Adorno was one of the most prominent public voices in West-Germany. As a professor and institute director, a frequently heard expert on radio, a prolific cultural critic, and even a sort of public counselor, he helped shape the self-image of German post-war society. The very term “post-war society” is partly an achievement: Adorno approached Germany sociologically, as a configuration of organizations and groups, as opposed to a community of blood, race, and fate, and he sought to encourage an earnest post-war and post-genocide reckoning with the crimes committed under National Socialism, against widespread tendencies of evasiveness and disavowal. More insistently and effectively than most, Adorno reminded Germans that they lived “after Auschwitz.”


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