The notion that a laminated card could introduce an undergraduate to one of the most challenging thinkers of the twentieth century—a man who once wrote that there is no right life within a wrong world—is almost comical. However, that is essentially what took place. Theodor Adorno became teachable somewhere between the survey courses of American liberal arts colleges and the lecture halls of British universities. A British professor who has had a quiet, consistent, and genuinely underappreciated impact on humanities departments in the United States is primarily to blame for that change.
Adorno was not a simple person. Born in Frankfurt in 1903 into a musical family—his mother was a singer, and his aunt was a pianist—he was exposed to both Beethoven and Schoenberg before the majority of people his age had developed a single cohesive opinion about either. He later rose to prominence as a leading voice of the Frankfurt School, a group of German thinkers who combined Hegel, Freud, and Marx into a framework for critiquing the fundamentals of contemporary society. His major works, such as Negative Dialectics and Dialectic of Enlightenment, are not the kinds of texts you give students on Tuesday and expect them to discuss by Thursday. They need a guide, experience, and patience.
The British professor comes into play at this point. Without going into hagiography, it’s reasonable to argue that the approach—reducing Adorno’s concepts to their most basic structure without undermining their true complexity—was what made this person’s contribution unique. Within some theory circles, the index card—literal or metaphorical depending on who is telling the story—became a sort of legend, a shorthand for the notion that if you gave someone the outline of Adorno’s criticism of the culture industry, they would immediately understand why it was important. This story may have developed in the retelling. However, the educational impact appears to be genuine.
For many years, American universities had conflicting opinions about Frankfurt School theory. There is a feeling that departments were uneasy due to the sheer weight of the German philosophical tradition. Adorno was uneasily positioned between continental and analytical traditions, and neither group was able to fully claim him. In recent work, Harvard intellectual historian Peter Gordon has argued that conventional interpretations of Adorno as a pure pessimist—as someone who only offers a vision of despair—fundamentally miss the point. Gordon suggests that Adorno was also striving for something akin to happiness, despite the fact that it was constantly ephemeral and transient. A door was opened by that reframing. Additionally, the British professor in question used a syllabus to guide them through it.

The way theory is taught in the US gradually changed as a result. Courses that had previously gone straight from Foucault to Butler without pausing at the Frankfurt School started to make room. Graduate programs began viewing Adorno as fundamental rather than an optional side trip. It’s still unclear if this change is long-lasting or if it’s a reflection of the unique intellectual moment we’re in, where criticism of consumerism, media, and manufactured culture seems urgently relevant once more. It seems to land differently now than it might have twenty years ago, when the mechanisms of mass culture were less obvious, as students interact with Adorno’s concept of the culture industry for the first time.
The British professor who made Theodor Adorno famous on a card continues to teach, develop curricula, and maintain that challenging concepts should be carefully translated rather than abandoned. That is a sort of argument in and of itself, not only about Adorno but also about the purpose of education. Certain concepts are difficult because they depict difficult things. It’s not dumbing them down to make them accessible. It’s carrying out the task.
