By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 2.28.02 @ 12:01AM
In an intellectual climate dominated by plagiarists and hoaxers, it requires an esspecial talent to author the Worst Book of the Year.
Washington -- It is that time of year when critics in various
fields of intellectual endeavor bestow their awards for "the best."
There are the Pulitzers, the Emmys, the Oscars. Perhaps less
well-known, but surely more exacting in their standards, are the
Cooglers. Critics of a contrarian cast of mind also suffer the urge
to solemnize.
Pulitzers, Emmys, and Oscars are the awards conferred by
conventional critics responding to that mainstream American quest,
"Why not the best?" We contrarians sitting on the committee that
confers the J. Gordon Coogler Award pursue a different quest,
namely, "Why not the worst?" and so we confer Cooglers upon the
worst: the worst book, the worst journalism.
I have served on the Coogler panel for years, and endured some
excruciatingly bad books, both fiction and non-fiction. This year
the Coogler Award for the Worst Book of 2001 breaks new ground.
Usually my colleagues and I have conferred it in recognition of
ghastly prose or imbecilic analysis or a preposterous thesis or all
of the above. Cognizant, however, of an emerging trend in American
intellectual life, we have wanted this year to go beyond mere bad
writing and give especial consideration to America's intellectual
trend-setters, the elite intellectuals who are on the cutting-edge
of literary technique. That is to say we have focused on our
country's growing number of talented plagiarists and hoaxers.
All sensitive readers of the public prints must know by now that
many of the most celebrated writers in the land steal other
writers' material and often simply make things up, for instance,
footnotes, archival evidence, and even their own biographies
(remember Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Joseph Ellis's
apocryphal revelations of his Vietnam and civil rights exploits).
News stories and feature articles in our most prestigious
publications have often seemed larded with nonsense, but now many
renowned editors are admitting to having published as fact stories
that are almost total fiction.
Just last week the "New York Times" admitted that one of its
prized writers, Michael Finkel, published as factual reporting a
story in the "New York Times Magazine" that was sheer fabrication,
a tear-jerker about an impoverished Ivory Coast laborer. Thus the
"Times" joins the ranks of such venerable publications as the "New
Republic" (Stephen Glass and Ruth Shalit), the "New Yorker" (Rodney
Rothman) and "Slate" (Jay Forman) in admitting to having published
stories that were humbug -- and I might add obvious humbug to any
readers haunted by a skeptical mind. The "Slate" story was a beaut
claiming that in the Florida Keys outdoorsmen cast fishing lines
into trees and reeled in shrieking monkeys. That was the
on-the-scene report of Mr. Forman. Where is he now?
Skeptical readers will also recall the columnists who so often
get caught passing off their infantile fantasies as real people
ground down by cruel America. Remember Mike Barnicle of the "Boston
Globe," gone from the "Globe" now but still huffing and puffing on
cable television. Recall Michael Daly's resignation from the "New
York Daily News" for passing off a fictional character as real
flesh and blood or Patricia Smith's sad departure from the "Boston
Globe."
As I say, these hoaxers are not necessarily discredited by being
exposed. Many go on to higher things, for plagiarism and fraud are
becoming marks of genius among some of America's most famous
intellectuals. Barnicle survives as a TV sage. Daly went on to "New
York" magazine. Smith, though always dubious, had been nominated
for Pulitzers. Then there is the inimitable Michael G. Gartner who
in 1993 resigned as president of NBC News after acknowledging that
one of his news teams had broadcast a hoax. He left for a small
Iowa newspaper where four years later the Pulitzer Committee
awarded him a Pulitzer for "editorial writing."
An essential technique in this growing intellectual movement
seems to be an aptitude for plagiarism. At this very hour
illustrious historians are admitting to repeated acts of
plagiarism, for instance, Stephen Ambrose, and Doris Kearns
Goodwin. Goodwin is actually boasting of her plagiarism as the mark
of a very hard-working "wife and mother." Doubtless she will remain
an esteemed figure.
And so it is that this year in recognition of this promising
trend in our intellectual life the J. Gordon Coogler Award for 2001
goes to the most gifted of the New Charlatans, Professor Michael
Bellesiles, author of "Arming America: The Origins of a National
Gun Culture."
The book won the Bancroft Award last April, the most prestigious
award in American history, despite its fabricated sources,
misstated historical events, implausible thesis and its author's
inability to defend its integrity. For over a year ever more of the
book's deceptions have been exposed, yet the Bancroft still
glitters on Bellesiles's chest. He stands by his story as
adamantinely as Alger Hiss once stood by his. And his thesis really
is implausible. Bellesiles claims that up through the
mid-nineteenth century guns were relatively rare in America.
Apparently the early American held off angry Indians and secured
dinner for his frontier family by resorting to wholesome
fisticuffs, perhaps heaving a few stones at the passing fauna and
coaxing a nearby war party to calm down. And Bellesiles defends his
position by citing documents that no other scholars can find. The
book is a nonsense and a fraud. It wins the Coogler for the year
2001.
Let the carpers complain that the book was actually published in
the year 2000. To us modernists on the Coogler Committee it all
depends on the meaning of the word year. Besides "Arming America"
came out in paperback in 2001
topics:
Television, Books