Originally posted by Jonathan H
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My first Ripper book was Cullen's and like you it made a big impression on me at the time ( I was 14) because his novelistic writing style was captivating. But you've hit on something that we must understand when dealing with his coming to the conclusion that Druitt was Jack the Ripper... He was a Marxist and how convenient it was for him to find a cultured symbol of near aristocracy for the Ripper instead of some low class bloke from the East End. His thematic unity to a messy mystery had a purpose other than historical research. However we as historians, interpret Macnaghten, Cullen had an agenda. I later came to realize that his book was not historical, but political and his version of the JTR saga fit nicely into the political point he was conveying... I have not seen the book in 30 years but I still remember the illustrations; the goulish fiend with a knife stalking the poverty ridden East End... and the hapless and blindfolded policeman wandering amlessly around while the "little people" derided him.... And Oh, Warren? he really raked him over the coals for obvious reasons.
As Stewart correctly pointed out about the viewing of history with bias or an agenda, I now view Cullen's writings as such, and thus approach Druitt with measured caution.
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