The Politics of Memory: Otto Hahn and the Third Reich
Abstract
As President of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society and its successor, the Max Planck Society, from 1946 until 1960, Otto Hahn (1879-1968) sought to portray science under the Third Reich as a purely intellectual endeavor untainted by National Socialism. I outline Hahn's activities from 1933 into the postwar years, focusing on the contrast between his personal stance during the National Socialist period, when he distinguished himself as an upright non-Nazi, and his postwar attitude, which was characterized by suppression and denial of Germany's recent past. Particular examples include Hahn's efforts to help Jewish friends; his testimony for colleagues involved in denazification and on trial in Nuremberg; his postwar relationships with émigré colleagues, including Lise Meitner; and his misrepresentation of his wartime work in the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Chemistry.
- Publication:
-
Physics in Perspective
- Pub Date:
- March 2006
- DOI:
- 10.1007/s00016-004-0248-5
- Bibcode:
- 2006PhP.....8....3S
- Keywords:
-
- Otto Hahn;
- Lise Meitner;
- Fritz Haber;
- Max von Laue;
- Max Planck;
- Ernst Telschow;
- Fritz Paneth;
- Richard Willstä
- tter;
- Philipp Hoernes;
- Wilhelm Traube;
- Maria Rausch von Traubenberg;
- Otto Meyerhof;
- Friedrich Hermann Rein;
- Stefanie Horovitz;
- nuclear fission;
- Nobel Prizes;
- Heinrich Hö
- rlein;
- Ernst von Weizsä
- cker;
- Carl Friedrich von Weizsä
- Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Chemistry;
- Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physical Chemistry;
- Kaiser Wilhelm Society;
- German fission project;
- Werner Heisenberg;
- Gottfried von Droste;
- Max Planck Society;
- Richard Willstätter;
- Heinrich Hörlein;
- Ernst von Weizsäcker;
- Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker