Sweet Square
ˈkämyənəst
British democracy at it's best.
British democracy at it's best.
Strange Death of Europe... HummmTwitter is going crazy over the bookshelf![]()
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Strange_Death_of_Europewriting in The Guardian, the political journalist Gaby Hinsliff described Strange Death as "gentrified xenophobia" and "Chapter after chapter circles around the same repetitive themes: migrants raping and murdering and terrorising; paeans to Christianity; long polemics about how Europe is too 'exhausted by history' and colonial guilt to face another battle, and is thus letting itself be rolled over by invaders fiercely confident in their own beliefs", while also pointing out that Murray offers little definition of the European culture he claims is under threat.[5]
Twitter is going crazy over the bookshelf![]()
It’s a bit ridiculous but you just know Gove would be nodding along to the two Murray books.
Yes, at the least he'll retain his MP's salary, pension and influence, and in many cases they just keep their head down for a year or so and then get promotion again. Constituency parties never seem to act on these things either. Or even the voters. One does despair a bit at times.resigned as minister ... really should have resigned as an mp...
suspect we will see him back in a government post in 6 months once this has blown over
We're being trolled by the BookShelfGate photo, I fear.
And another thing ... if someone junior in his office or the civil service had used HOC notepaper for personal advantage they would have been sacked. People always talk of those at the top having more responsibility, but in practice they don't, It's the lower levels that are always punished the most.resigned as minister ... really should have resigned as an mp...
suspect we will see him back in a government post in 6 months once this has blown over
I have a book written by Hitler on my shelf....
Is there any plausible deniability to suggest that it's still possible to come across Irving without knowing who he is?
His credibility as a historian is obviously in tatters as a result of the Lipstadt case, but there are at least enough references to him as serious historian (in some cases from people who are pushing their own denialism agenda but in some cases not) to make me think that you could stumble across it and not realise who he is.
I simply don't accept that as an excuse for Gove, at the very least we should hold our politicians to the standards of being able to do a google search, but it was a question which struck me when I re-read Slaughterhouse Five and saw Irving quoted uncritically by Vonnegut without any comment.
The thing is that Hitler's book is of interest at a primary source account of that period of history. Irving's work has absolutely no value except as a study of denialism, and I don't see any of the necessary works surrounding that (e.g. Lipstadt's own book) to suggest that that is the context in which Gove may have been interested in it. The best defence you can offer is that he didn't know what Irving was, but I think it's both extremely implausible and ludicrously week.
The old ones are the best.the david irving book hopefully finishes gove
From what I understand that particular book was published before Irving’s reputation and credibility collapsed. I don’t think it’s such an issue to have it on the shelf given that it’s balanced somewhat by some other works in the collection concerning the broader topic. I’ve got books by anti-Islam authors like Robert Spencer, Bat Ye’or and Ayan Hirsi Ali on my shelf, but many many more which would counter them.
I’d be much more concerned by The Bell Curve and The Strange Death of Europe, especially as they may be perceived to potentially pertain much more to current issues facing the present government.
I can't believe that Irving had any possible excuse for that 'oversight'. I mean, I've only read about half-a-dozen books on WWII, yet even I'd read of the controversy over (and manipulation of) the Dresden figures; so, if a layperson was aware of it, no way was an historian ignorant of the matter. Irving had no defence.In the first place Irving knew all along that there were powerful reasons for doubting the genuineness of the purported TB47. It had been denounced by Seydewitz as fraudulent. Indeed Irving himself was aware that Goebbels had been seeking to take propagandist advantage of the raid by making exaggerated claims as to the number of deaths.
Anyway, we know why Gove has it on his shelf. He's a bit of a fan:
Anyway, we know why Gove has it on his shelf. He's a bit of a fan:
This is the article, he really doesn’t come across as a fan of Irving:
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Hmmm. The motivations of the article are very suspicious at best. Interesting use of an attempted moral equivalence argument whilst deriding the use of "moral equivalence".This is the article, he really doesn’t come across as a fan of Irving:
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That's a fair reading.
It is a really odd article though which seems to set Irving up simply as a yardstick in which to argue that Kissinger isn't a war criminal and that suggesting he could be is akin to holocaust denial. At best, I'd say he'd had too much coke that week.
Hmmm. The motivations of the article are very suspicious at best. Interesting use of an attempted moral equivalence argument whilst deriding the use of "moral equivalence".
Would love to have seen Gove and Hitchens on the debating podiums in response to this article.
I suspect it’s fairly standard Cold War stuff from the right, pushing American/Western innocence, etc.
Anyway this resonates as maybe the primary issue with that collection:
There’s a real lack of intellectual curiosity on display there.
I have a book written by Hitler on my shelf....
I have most of David Irving's books. I also have books by Ian Kershaw, Richard Evans and Robert Jan Van Pelt, among other authors on WWII.