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On June 28, 1999 David Irving had written to Jonathan Morse:
I take it I take it that none of you fine H-Net correspondents has read any book by me, let alone my Goebbels. Mastermind of the Third Reich, which provides more Holocaust material than one by any so called Holocaust historian.
Morse replied: |
Monday, June 28, 1999
From: Jonathan Morse
Not quite correct. And oh my prophetic soul: just yesterday I wrote offlist to a historian:
As for your point about the Ph.D.: aren’t you addressing your complaint to the wrong people? In their posts to list H-Antisemitism, both [Stan] Nadel and Benjamin made the point that of course one can be a historian without the diploma. And of course in my field, English, any department would have been happy to hire Allen Tate (BA) or Kenneth Burke (college dropout) or R.P. Blackmur (high school dropout) — to name only three of the late great who (unlike most of your examples) lived at a time when the Ph.D. was the normal credential. On the other hand, the list-member who raised that silly issue is precisely the person you haven’t complained to. You aren’t a member of the list where these messages were posted, so I assume you got them at second hand, presumably in garbled form. On the other hand, can it be possible that a documentary historian has got his attributions wrong? Jonathan Morse
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Saturday, July 3, 1999
From: Jonathan Morse Thanks very much for your useful Irvingsites. I hope those prosecutorial ellipses in the brief against you elide some irony, because the language on the page certainly seems too crude to take at face value. But I’m neither a lawyer nor a historian, so I’m not qualified to argue with you about the justice of your case. If you care, I’m generally against censorship, whether the victim is Iris Chang or you. Still, have you seen any of the pictures of the 1910-1945 Japanese occupation that South Korean kids see in their history books — for instance, the picture of the large field full of Korean nationalists executed by the traditional Japanese method of crucifixion? Oddly enough, those pictures are accurate representations of the historical record. Any Korean over the age of 70, and I mean ANY Korean, can confirm that. Which is to say the banal old Bible is right: “I find then a law, that, when I would do good, evil is present with me.” A priori, I have no trouble believing that highly civilized people are capable of building gas chambers. |
Saturday, April 15, 2000
From:Robert Benjamin Keegan’s appalling article Keegan’s article is appalling. First, he has either not read or does not understand the decision. Judge Gray says:
In short, and as Judge Gray says, Irving’s dishonesty is so evident that any UNproven defamatory statements Professor Lipstadt made about him do not matter. Keegan ignores Judge Gray’s statement that Irving deliberately falsified and distorted historical evidence to serve his ideology, saying instead that Irving has been condemned for mere errors in interpretation. Keegan says:
Irving, in other words, is STILL a legitimate and honest historian, albeit a naughty little boy in a 62-year old body. By this standard, Hitler and Himmler were REAL scamps and just needed some quiet time to calm down. Then Keegan adds:
I have always respected Keegan as both a writer and historian. But, when coupled with his remarks about Deborah Lipstadt, his “there, there, David, it will be all right” to Mr. Irving makes it hard to escape the conclusion that he regards Holocaust denial as either a triviality or a product of Jewish hysteria. [H-Net Humanities & Social Sciences OnLine] Send comments and questions to H-Net Webstaff Copyright © 1995-98, H-Net, Humanities & Social Sciences OnLine Click Here for an Internet Citation Guide.
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