Benjamin Baer, Princeton U, on "Education Before Auschwitz"

5:00pm - December/5/2019

In 1966 Theodor Adorno gave a radio lecture called “Education After Auschwitz” in which he considered the primary task of young peoples’ education as one of forestalling the always-potential recurrence of such a catastrophe. Anticolonial, antiracist, and communist intellectuals in the 1920s-30s interwar epoch prefigured Adorno’s argument as they imagined theories and practices of education to undo and avert the imperialist destructiveness of artificial epistemic underdevelopment, subalternization, and “capitalist psychology.” Elaborating on arguments in his current book Indigenous Vanguards: Education, National Liberation, and the Limits of Modernism (Columbia, 2019), Ben Baer will discuss the intertwined paradoxes and promises of these dreams for a new education.

This lecture is organized by Comparative Literature’s Theorizing Lecture series with the generous support of the Department of South Asia Studies and in collaboration with the Mods Working Group.

Faculty Lounge (Room 135) Fisher Bennett Hall 

All welcome