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College Plans to Question Historian

Josey1Josey1 Member Posts: 9,598 ✭✭
edited February 2002 in General Discussion
College Plans to Question HistorianHistorian Will Undergo Inquiry From Emory University for Book on Role of Guns in U.S.The Associated Press Feb. 7 NEW YORK (AP) A disputed, prize-winning book about the role of guns in the United States will undergo a formal inquiry from Emory University, where author Michael Bellesiles is a professor of history.In a statement released this week, Emory official Robert A. Paul said that the Atlanta-based school has initiated a process for "addressing allegations of misconduct in research.""Both the history department and Michael Bellesiles have now requested that we initiate this process, and we have done so," said Paul, dean of Emory College, an undergraduate division of the university. "Professor Bellesiles says that he welcomes the review by his faculty colleagues and other scholars in this forum."Bellesiles, on a fellowship for the academic year, did not immediately return telephone calls from The Associated Press.Bellesiles (pronounced Bell-EEL) spent 10 years working on "Arming America," published by Alfred A. Knopf in 2000. The book challenges the idea that the United States has always been a gun-oriented culture and that well-armed militias were essential to the Revolutionary War.Relying on numerous sources, Bellesiles writes that only a small percentage of people possessed firearms in colonial times and that militias were mostly ineffective. Only after the Civil War, he contends, did guns become important to the culture."Arming America" was praised in both The New York Times and The New York Review of Books and won the prestigious Bancroft Prize for history. Many cited it as a devastating statement against America's alleged historical love affair with firearms."The way we think about guns and violence in America will never be the same," wrote Michael Zuckerman, a professor of history at the University of Pennsylvania. "Michael Bellesiles is the NRA's worst nightmare."Gun advocates quickly attacked the book, with National Rifle Association president, actor Charlton Heston, complaining that Bellesiles had "too much time on his hands."But scholars and critics also became skeptical. Bellesiles has been accused of ideological bias, selective scholarship and misleading statements. He has acknowledged some errors, but defends his book as fundamentally sound.Jane Garrett, Bellesiles' editor at Knopf, said Thursday in a statement that some corrections already have been made in the paperback edition. She added that "other corrections will be made in subsequent printings with regard to the few additional factual errors that have been discovered."We hasten to point out, however, that the majority of the matters that have been raised are matters of interpretation," Garrett said.In a highly anticipated forum appearing in the upcoming issue of the William & Mary Quarterly, four leading historians evaluate "Arming America," and Bellesiles provides a lengthy defense. Many in the academic community believe his reputation depends on how effectively he responds.The statement from Emory referred to the William & Mary article and said that "questions remain concerning his research."The participants in the William & Mary forum, which comes out next week, criticize "Arming America." Gloria L. Main, a history professor at the University of Colorado, says in the quarterly that Bellesiles greatly underestimates the level of gun ownership in colonial times. Randolph Roth, professor of history at Ohio State University, finds Bellesiles guilty of letting his theory guide his research, rather than the other way around.Bellesiles' response in the forum is both aggressive and cautious. He defends his scholarship and worries about the public's belief in the power of militias. But he also emphasizes that his book offers no definitive proof and notes the uncertain nature of historical scholarship.Copyright 2002 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. http://www.abcnews.go.com/wire/US/ap20020207_1431.html

Comments

  • turboturbo Member Posts: 820 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Who is going to grill the academic department in this college, for sponsoring this moron's work.The only reason they are going thru this excersize is to give themselves a boost in their image among their acade-maniac peers.They should be grilling all those who came out supporting this guys writings.Barnes & Noble moved his book to the fiction department, and when it still wouldn't sell, stopped carrying it.
  • gap1916gap1916 Member Posts: 4,977
    edited November -1
    Josey 1:Have a I mentiond you do a darn good job of posting here? Well, You Do. Thank You.
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