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7 - National Memory's Schlüsselkinder: Migration, Pedagogy, and German Remembrance Culture

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2013

Annette Seidel Arpaci
Affiliation:
University of Leeds
Stuart Taberner
Affiliation:
University of Leeds
Paul Cooke
Affiliation:
University of Leeds
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Summary

In his lecture “Erziehung nach Auschwitz,” broadcast on Hessischer Rundfunk in 1966, Theodor Adorno postulated that political education should be centered on ensuring “daß Auschwitz sich nicht wiederhole.” In pedagogic debates, “Erziehung nach Auschwitz” is regarded as the foundation for post-1968 conceptions of education and socialization in Germany. Adorno, who had remigrated to Germany in 1949, had obviously not considered that the so-called guest workers, Gastarbeiter, arriving since the late 1950s, were coming to stay. If Adorno had anticipated this development, would his lecture have been written any differently? Or is it more likely that even then it would not have occurred to him, given his rejection of collective formations as oppressive, to think about “Erziehung” in ethnicized categories? In any case, although it is a recent development in Germany to speak about an “Einwanderungsland,” even more recent is the discourse about the possible relationship of postwar labor immigration to the memory of National Socialism and the Holocaust.

In this chapter, I argue that while migrantized women and men in Germany are excluded from a mainstream national remembrance culture, the debates challenging this exclusion are themselves marked not only by a further production of yet other “others” but also by a lack of interest in those migrant histories and positionalities that are prone to contradict a construed “neutrality” of migrants with regard to what is called the German past. Accordingly, these debates remain firmly within the parameters of mainstream discourse, merely adding another participant to the “dialogue” allegedly taking place between “Germans” and “Jews.”

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2006

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