-Caveat Lector-

Some more on why it is bizarre to think the Frankfurt School "invented" PC.
Michael Pugliese
P.S. The German SDS was originally the student wing of the SPD,

http://www.google.com/search?q=Adorno+Habermas+Left+Fascism+SDS
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&safe=off&q=Adorno+Habermas+Left+Fasci
sm+&btnG=Google+Search
http://www.linguafranca.com/9811/inside.html

Inside Publishing

CRITICAL THEORY AT THE BARRICADES

ON APRIL 22, 1969, SHORTLY AFTER BEGINNING a lecture in his course on
dialectical thought before an audience of nearly one thousand students at
the University of Frankfurt, the eminent Frankfurt School sociologist and
Marxist cultural critic Theodor W. Adorno found himself in an unusual
situation. A student in one of the back rows interrupted him, demanding that
he engage in "self-criticism." Another student silently walked up to the
blackboard and wrote the following words: "He who only allows dear Adorno to
rule will uphold capitalism his entire life." After Adorno told the class
that they would have five minutes to decide if his lecture should continue,
three female students dressed in leather jackets rushed the podium. They
showered him with roses and tulips, exposed their breasts, and tried
repeatedly to kiss him. Incensed and humiliated, Adorno stormed out of the
lecture hall.

This incident, which came to be known as the Busenaktion ("breast action"),
has never figured with much prominence in American studies of the Frankfurt
School. Americans are far more apt to think of the leading figures of
Critical Theory–Adorno, Max Horkheimer, Herbert Marcuse, and
others–languishing in exile in New York and southern California during the
Nazi period, or of the eclectic blend of Marxism, psychoanalysis, and
sociology that characterized their thought. Their work is famous for its
mandarinism, its abstraction, and–especially in the case of Adorno–its
uncompromising commitment to the independence of critical thought and high
art. Yet in Germany, on the thirtieth anniversary of the student revolts of
1968, the Frankfurt School is also remembered for its vexed role in the
volatile, sometimes violent political upheavals of the 1960s.

The Busenaktion was just one of many confrontations between the increasingly
"praxis"-oriented German New Left and the theoreticians who had been its
mentors. The turbulent evolution of this relationship is the subject of
Wolfgang Kraushaar’s elaborate three-volume work, Frankfurter Schule und
Studentenbewegung: Von der Flaschenpost zum Molotowcocktail, 1946—1995 (The
Frankfurt School and the Student Movement: From the Message in the Bottle to
the Molotov Cocktail, 1946—1995), published in Germany this past spring by
Rogner & Bernhard. A political scientist at Hamburg’s Institute of Social
Research and a bona fide ’68er, Kraushaar has produced a painstaking and
lavish collection. It consists of a meticulously detailed historical
overview, an extensive compendium of documents and photographs, and a
collection of retrospective essays with titles like "Dialogues on Theory and
Praxis" and "The Oedipal Complex of the ’68ers."

The story that these volumes tell ends on a sorry note. Adorno and
Horkheimer, the grand old men of the German intellectual left, saw their
lectures heckled, their institute occupied, and their own students, notably
Adorno’s protégé Hans-Jürgen Krahl, turn against them. In a moment of
despair during the student occupation of the institute in January 1969,
Adorno called the police. Students were outraged at his betrayal. "Adorno as
institution is dead," declared a flyer distributed by a radical group of
sociology students in April of that year.


"ADORNO AS INSTITUTION IS DEAD," DECLARED A FLYER DISTRIBUTED BY A RADICAL
GROUP OF SOCIOLOGY STUDENTS.
Adorno himself would survive just another few months. He died of a heart
attack in Switzerland on August 6, 1969, at the age of sixty-five. Six weeks
earlier, he had written to Marcuse of his "extreme depression" and of his
revulsion at the fascist overtones he sensed in the tactics and demands of t
he students.

Yet relations between leftist German students and their mentors had not
always been so antagonistic. Kraushaar begins in the late 1940s, when
Horkheimer and Adorno, the two central figures from the prewar incarnation
of the Frankfurt-based Institut für Sozialforschung, returned to Germany
from their American exile. Their "critical sociology," which fused the
insights of Weber with those of Marx and Hegel, along with their trenchant
critique of fascism, attracted students looking for alternatives to the
positivism and conservatism that dominated German intellectual life.

When Horkheimer first returned to Germany, originally as a guest professor
at the University of Frankfurt in 1948 and then as the chair of sociology
and philosophy in 1949, his students received him warmly. From the outset,
he and Adorno assumed the role of spokesmen for "the reeducation of German
youth." Because they were left-wing intellectuals and returned Jewish
refugees who had been personally affected by the horrors of National
Socialism, the two were less suspect to radical students than instructors
who had remained in Germany under Hitler. Both found that German students
took to their ideas, and both recognized promising signs of intellectual
advancement among their disciples. "They are learning to express themselves
and to have the freedom to say what they believe," announced Horkheimer in a
Frankfurt-based student newspaper in 1960. Several of their early students
and associates, Jürgen Habermas among them, would go on to become leading
intellectuals.

As the political climate shifted in the mid-1960s, however, the very
students who had been vocal and independent just a few years earlier became
disenchanted with the Olympian detachment of their mentors. In 1964, under
the charismatic leadership of Rudi Dutschke, the radical organization
Subversive Aktion undertook a series of confrontations with the elder
spiritual leaders. Dutschke was also largely responsible for the spread of
anti-Establishment activism within the growing Sozialistischer Deutscher
Studentenbund (Union of German Socialist Students, or SDS), which demanded
the total transformation of German society. His group challenged the
conservatism of the Adenauer administration and declared that the
denazification of West German society and its institutions had been
halfhearted and ineffectual. The rise of the civil rights and anti-Vietnam
movements on the other side of the Atlantic further inspired the radicalism
of these students. In a 1967 debate, Dutschke dismissed Habermas’s thought
as outdated; Habermas responded by calling Dutschke’s unbridled activism
"left-wing fascism."

At the same time that Adorno was working on such rarefied theoretical works
as Negative Dialectics (1966) and Aesthetic Theory (1970), the SDS was
operating under the banner "Enlightenment through Action," and engaging in
demonstrations: against the Vietnam War, against repressive university
reforms, and against the right-wing German media monopoly. The elder
professors were not amused. Like such American Old Guard leftists as Irving
Howe, who expressed distaste for Tom Hayden and the American Students for a
Democratic Society, the Frankfurt School veterans were disturbed by the
youthful disrespect of liberal institutions and disgusted by what they saw
as a dogmatic faith in the primacy of action. "I established a theoretical
model of thought," Adorno remarked. "How could I have suspected that people
would want to implement it with Molotov cocktails?"

But members of the student movement did not abandon the work of their elders
altogether. They circulated pirated copies of Dialectic of Enlightenment
(1947); they rediscovered Georg Lukács and the Marxist texts of Walter
Benjamin; and above all they turned their attention to the writings of
Marcuse. His One-Dimensional Man (1964), already influential in America,
appeared in German translation in 1967. The year before, Marcuse, who had
remained in American exile, visited Germany. At the University of Frankfurt,
he gave the keynote lecture at a student-sponsored conference on Vietnam, an
event at which more than two thousand students were present and which led to
mass antiwar demonstrations. Already known for his support of the American
student movement, and for his mentorship of Angela Davis, Marcuse drew
instant sympathy from the German students and formed a lasting friendship
with Dutschke. In his celebrated essay "Repressive Tolerance" (published in
German in 1966), Marcuse declared that in the case of insurrections among
the oppressed, "no third party, and least of all the educator and
intellectual, has the right to preach them abstention."


"HOW COULD I HAVE SUSPECTED THAT PEOPLE WOULD WANT TO IMPLEMENT MY IDEAS
WITH MOLOTOV COCKTAILS?" ASKED ADORNO.
Unsurprisingly, Horkheimer and Adorno were suspicious of Marcuse’s
engagement with the student rebels. A firm believer that science
(Wissenschaft) and culture (Kultur) should be autonomous spheres, free of
any direct involvement with politics, Adorno declared that he would remain a
"theoretical human being," unwilling to draw practical consequences from his
ideas. "If I were to give practical advice in the way that Herbert Marcuse
has to a certain extent done," Adorno remarked in a 1969 interview in Der
Spiegel, "it would be at the cost of my own productivity."

Although the students vilified him for such quietism, Adorno’s view of them
was more ambivalent. On his deathbed he dictated a final letter to Marcuse,
hoping to prevent the gulf between them from growing any wider. His words
struck a remarkably conciliatory note: "I am the last to underestimate the
merits of the student movement," he insisted. "It has disrupted the smooth
transition to a totally administered world"–the world whose coming his own
work so passionately decried.

In 1959, in his lecture "What Does Coming to Terms With the Past Mean?"–a
key text for Germany’s postwar confrontations with its National Socialist
legacy–Adorno had argued that the most urgent task facing postwar Germany
was the eradication of those aspects of German culture and society that had
enabled fascism to take root. In a different way, the German ‘68ers saw
themselves as carrying out that very task. Of course, the wounds of the
past, inflamed by the rise of terrorism (led by guerrilla groups like the
Red Army Faction), in the 1970s, may not yet be healed. But now, thanks to
Kraushaar, participants in this generational conflict can begin to come to
terms with their own past.

NOAH ISENBERG



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