ABSTRACT

On 22 July 1969 an old man walked out of a courtroom in Frankfurt, Germany. On the way he permitted himself a condescending smile in the direction of the defendant, a radical student leader named Hans-Jürgen Krahl. Krahl was on trial for trespassing; the old man, who had brought the charges against him, was his teacher, eodor W. Adorno. e preceding February, Krahl had led a student occupation of Adorno’s beloved Institute for Social Research; this was his trespass. His ensuing trial was the culmination of growing tension between, on the one hand, Adorno himself, his associate Max Horkheimer and the other “adult” spirits of the institute, and their own students on the other. e students claimed merely to be carrying into action the Marxist ideas and theories of the Frankfurt School. In their eyes, their elders – in particular, Horkheimer and Adorno – had ceased to be real Marxists long before. For true Marxism, the students argued, could not be merely a matter of theory. Was it not Marx himself who had written, in the “ eses on Feuerbach”, that “the philosophers have only interpreted the world in various ways; the point is to change it?” (Marx 1994b: 101).