First, obviously, I must apologize very sincerely to Stewart for my ill-bred drunken remarks at the Norwich conference. They fully justify his tendency to slip into a tone of asperity with me, and I will cease to complain about it.
Natalie - I'm sorry, I don't really understand the point you are making, and I don't recognize your account of my research methods, which I think I have explained elsewhere in a recent posting. But my trawl through the HUGE thread on Eddowes' kidney last night revealed that, however much you have been convinced by Christy Campbell's view of Anderson, you really do appreciate the excellence of Paul Begg's The Facts and the really interesting arguments he puts forward in it. This forgives a multitude of sins!
Autospirograph - I'm interested in your offer, but again don't quite understand it. In any case, the Ripper boards are something I don't look at very often, and then only with cause. I did so when we were working on the new A to Z. I am doing so now because of the upcoming Knoxville conference, and am actually trawling through everything on them for that purpose, (and certainly not to look out what anybody has said about me. It was the frequency of Stewart's claims that Paul and I lack objectivity, and the preposterous revival of insinuations that the Swanson marginalia may be tainted by tampering or forgery, persistently followed up by even more vehement assertions from Natalie and others, that led me to embroil myself in disputation. And I ran back through this thread and this thread only for my previous posting, to make sure that everything I said about the nature of Stewart's posts could be justified). But the truth is the Ripper is far from the centre of my life at present. I was surprised by how much I enjoyed Paul's The Facts since, as I told him, I had not felt any I great enthusiasm about The Definitive History. I was astonished by how impressive van Onselen's - (sorry about my misspelling last night) - methodological chapter was after the unpersuasiveness of his initial suggestion of Silver as the Ripper, until I googled him and discovered what a major scholar had stepped (or perhaps one should say slipped) into the field. And while I look forward immensely to reading Rob's 22-page account of Kosminski. which I have downloaded and printed for easy reading as I commute to work, the truth is that I get more pleasure out of reading Harold Bloom on The Merchant of Venice these days than anything on the Ripper or any other criminal.
The two things unknown to me in Phil's book when it came out were the detailed suggested identification of Smith's suspect as Morford or Orford (pp156-157) and the man seen in Church Lane after the Stride murder (pp 212-213). My disappointment at the lack of more new information was really a tribute to the amount of work done by previous Ripper researchers and not a criticism of Phil. I was amazed that the ground had been covered so thoroughly. If I wished to criticize Phil's work it would be on the quality of the brief argumentative sections, not the thorough coverage of press and archive material.
I have no serious interest in carrying disputation for disputation's sake any further. I have made the point that it is useless to discuss the importance of a historical personality's ethical and cultural background with commentators who insist that they can judge it without studying it. It doesn't concern me at all that my theory about David Cohen is rejected by scholars who try to cut the Gordian knot of Swanson's, Anderson's and Macnaghten's confused and contradictory accounts by speculatively suggesting forgery, or mendacity or senility on the part of any of them, or accuse me of bad scholarly method and pass on without addressing the issues. Paul Begg and Don Rumbelow (so far, as far as I know) are the two people who have raised demurrers based on acceptance of the clear facts before us, and to Don's objection ("There must be a simpler explanation") I can only agree that I wish it were so, and wait for some one to put one forward.
So I may return if someone who has thoroughly studied Anderson's beliefs and background comes forward with reasons for challenging his veracity, or someone with new facts or a clearly sensible reinterpretation of known ones offers reasons for doubting his position or reassessing Swanson's and/or Macnaghten's. Tomorrow essays for grading start to come in. On Tuesday I'm back in the classroom and have to get all my marking cleared up before I leave for Knoxville at the end of the week. So I'm unlikely to be back after tomorrow.
All the best,
Martin F
All the best,
Martin F
Natalie - I'm sorry, I don't really understand the point you are making, and I don't recognize your account of my research methods, which I think I have explained elsewhere in a recent posting. But my trawl through the HUGE thread on Eddowes' kidney last night revealed that, however much you have been convinced by Christy Campbell's view of Anderson, you really do appreciate the excellence of Paul Begg's The Facts and the really interesting arguments he puts forward in it. This forgives a multitude of sins!
Autospirograph - I'm interested in your offer, but again don't quite understand it. In any case, the Ripper boards are something I don't look at very often, and then only with cause. I did so when we were working on the new A to Z. I am doing so now because of the upcoming Knoxville conference, and am actually trawling through everything on them for that purpose, (and certainly not to look out what anybody has said about me. It was the frequency of Stewart's claims that Paul and I lack objectivity, and the preposterous revival of insinuations that the Swanson marginalia may be tainted by tampering or forgery, persistently followed up by even more vehement assertions from Natalie and others, that led me to embroil myself in disputation. And I ran back through this thread and this thread only for my previous posting, to make sure that everything I said about the nature of Stewart's posts could be justified). But the truth is the Ripper is far from the centre of my life at present. I was surprised by how much I enjoyed Paul's The Facts since, as I told him, I had not felt any I great enthusiasm about The Definitive History. I was astonished by how impressive van Onselen's - (sorry about my misspelling last night) - methodological chapter was after the unpersuasiveness of his initial suggestion of Silver as the Ripper, until I googled him and discovered what a major scholar had stepped (or perhaps one should say slipped) into the field. And while I look forward immensely to reading Rob's 22-page account of Kosminski. which I have downloaded and printed for easy reading as I commute to work, the truth is that I get more pleasure out of reading Harold Bloom on The Merchant of Venice these days than anything on the Ripper or any other criminal.
The two things unknown to me in Phil's book when it came out were the detailed suggested identification of Smith's suspect as Morford or Orford (pp156-157) and the man seen in Church Lane after the Stride murder (pp 212-213). My disappointment at the lack of more new information was really a tribute to the amount of work done by previous Ripper researchers and not a criticism of Phil. I was amazed that the ground had been covered so thoroughly. If I wished to criticize Phil's work it would be on the quality of the brief argumentative sections, not the thorough coverage of press and archive material.
I have no serious interest in carrying disputation for disputation's sake any further. I have made the point that it is useless to discuss the importance of a historical personality's ethical and cultural background with commentators who insist that they can judge it without studying it. It doesn't concern me at all that my theory about David Cohen is rejected by scholars who try to cut the Gordian knot of Swanson's, Anderson's and Macnaghten's confused and contradictory accounts by speculatively suggesting forgery, or mendacity or senility on the part of any of them, or accuse me of bad scholarly method and pass on without addressing the issues. Paul Begg and Don Rumbelow (so far, as far as I know) are the two people who have raised demurrers based on acceptance of the clear facts before us, and to Don's objection ("There must be a simpler explanation") I can only agree that I wish it were so, and wait for some one to put one forward.
So I may return if someone who has thoroughly studied Anderson's beliefs and background comes forward with reasons for challenging his veracity, or someone with new facts or a clearly sensible reinterpretation of known ones offers reasons for doubting his position or reassessing Swanson's and/or Macnaghten's. Tomorrow essays for grading start to come in. On Tuesday I'm back in the classroom and have to get all my marking cleared up before I leave for Knoxville at the end of the week. So I'm unlikely to be back after tomorrow.
All the best,
Martin F
All the best,
Martin F
Comment