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Support the Podcast*On Patreon*: https://www.patreon.com/c/Nullpunkt_pod *On PayPal*: https://paypal.me/hannohauenstein
In this episode of Nullpunkt, I speak with genocide scholar and historian Dirk Moses (City College of New York) about Adorno’s famous essay “Education after Auschwitz” – and what it demands after Gaza. We unpack how Holocaust remembrance in Germany has changed over the past decades and how this is increasingly visible in universities, politics, and German media.Moses argues that Germany’s memory culture has shifted from grassroots critique to state ideology, and asks what critical theory looks like when it becomes a handmaiden of power.
By Hanno HauensteinSupport the Podcast*On Patreon*: https://www.patreon.com/c/Nullpunkt_pod *On PayPal*: https://paypal.me/hannohauenstein
In this episode of Nullpunkt, I speak with genocide scholar and historian Dirk Moses (City College of New York) about Adorno’s famous essay “Education after Auschwitz” – and what it demands after Gaza. We unpack how Holocaust remembrance in Germany has changed over the past decades and how this is increasingly visible in universities, politics, and German media.Moses argues that Germany’s memory culture has shifted from grassroots critique to state ideology, and asks what critical theory looks like when it becomes a handmaiden of power.