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Review: Learning From the Germans

America, Neiman feels, can and should learn from the Germans, a thesis she examines at length, says Daniel Snowman

December 17, 2019 16:43
Sale of slaves on the streets of New Orleans, 1861
2 min read

Learning From the Germans by Susan Neiman (Allen Lane, £20)

What is the point of memorials and museums? To celebrate the heroes of the national past? To mourn “those who died that we might live”? Should each generation rethink the memorials erected in the past, replacing those it disapproves of with those of people and events newly admired?

What about a nation’s “dark past”? should this be memorialised by statues and museums — or obliterated from history? Such issues lie at the heart of Susan Neiman’s new book.

A Jewish American brought up in Atlanta, Neiman is a philosopher and writer, has held posts at Yale and Tel Aviv universities and has long been settled in Berlin where she is Director of the Einstein Forum. By and large, she argues, Germany came honourably to terms with its appallingly dark past within a few decades of the end of Nazism while, by contrast, many in the “Old South”, in which Neiman was raised, still try to retain the self-righteousness and crude racism of earlier times by perpetuating the flag and other symbols of the antebellum Confederacy. America, Neiman feels, can and should learn from the Germans.