[source] The
Fate of an Honest Intellectual by Dr. Noam
Chomsky Excerpted
from Understanding Power, New York,
2002, pp. 244-248
I'LL tell you another,
last case -- and there are many others
like this. Here's a story which is really
tragic. How many of you know about Joan
Peters, the book by Joan
Peters? There was this best-seller a few years
ago [in 1984], it went through
about ten printings, by a woman named Joan
Peters -- or at least, signed by Joan
Peters -- called From Time
Immemorial. It
was a big scholarly- looking book with
lots of footnotes, which purported to show
that the Palestinians were all recent
immigrants [i.e. to the Jewish-settled
areas of the former Palestine, during the
British mandate years of 1920 to
1948]. And it was very popular -- it
got literally hundreds of rave reviews,
and no negative reviews: the Washington
Post, the New York Times,
everybody was just raving about it. Here was this book which proved that
there were really no Palestinians! Of
course, the implicit message was, if
Israel kicks them all out there's no moral
issue, because they're just recent
immigrants who came in because the Jews
had built up the country. And there was
all kinds of demographic analysis in it,
and a big professor of demography at the
University of Chicago [Philip M.
Hauser] authenticated it. That was
the big intellectual hit for that year:
Saul Bellow, Barbara Tuchman,
everybody was talking about it as the
greatest thing since chocolate cake.
Well, one graduate student at Princeton, a
guy named Norman
Finkelstein, started reading
through the book. He was interested in the
history of Zionism, and as he read the
book he was kind of surprised by some of
the things it said. He's a very careful
student, and he started checking the
references -- and it turned out that the
whole thing was a hoax, it was completely
faked: probably it had been put together
by some intelligence agency or something
like that. Well, Finkelstein wrote up a
short paper of just preliminary findings,
it was about twenty-five pages or so, and
he sent it around to I think thirty people
who were interested in the topic, scholars
in the field and so on, saying: "Here's
what I've found in this book, do you think
it's worth pursuing?" Well, he got back one answer, from me.
I told him, yeah, I think it's an
interesting topic, but I warned him, if
you follow this, you're going to get in
trouble -- because you're going to expose
the American intellectual community as a
gang of frauds, and they are not going to
like it, and they're going to destroy you.
So I said: if you want to do it, go ahead,
but be aware of what you're getting into.
It's an important issue, it makes a big
difference whether you eliminate the moral
basis for driving out a population -- it's
preparing the basis for some real horrors
-- so a lot of people's lives could be at
stake. But your life is at stake too, I
told him, because if you pursue this, your
career is going to be ruined. Well, he didn't believe me. We became
very close friends after this, I didn't
know him before. He went ahead and wrote
up an article, and he started submitting
it to journals. Nothing: they didn't even
bother responding. I finally managed to
place a piece of it in In These
Times, a tiny left-wing journal
published in Illinois, where some of you
may have seen it. Otherwise nothing, no
response. Meanwhile his professors -- this
is Princeton University, supposed to be a
serious place -- stopped talking to him:
they wouldn't make appointments with him,
they wouldn't read his papers, he
basically had to quit the program. By this time, he was getting kind of
desperate, and he asked me what to do. I
gave him what I thought was good advice,
but what turned out to be bad advice: I
suggested that he shift over to a
different department, where I knew some
people and figured he'd at least be
treated decently. That turned out to be
wrong. He switched over, and when he got
to the point of writing his thesis he
literally could not get the faculty to
read it, he couldn't get them to come to
his thesis defense. Finally, out of
embarrassment, they granted him a Ph.D. --
he's very smart, incidentally -- but they
will not even write a letter for him
saying that he was a student at Princeton
University. I mean, sometimes you have
students for whom it's hard to write good
letters of recommendation, because you
really didn't think they were very good --
but you can write something, there are
ways of doing these things. This guy was
good, but he literally cannot get a
letter. He's now living in a little apartment
somewhere in New York City, and he's a
part-time -- if he'd done what he was
told, he would have gone on and right now
he'd be a professor somewhere at some big
university. Instead he's working part-time
with disturbed teenaged kids for a couple
thousand dollars a year. That's a lot
better than a death squad, it's true --
it's a whole lot better than a death
squad. But those are the techniques of
control that are around.
BUT let me just go on with the Joan Peters
story. Finkelstein's very persistent: he
took a summer off and sat in the New York
Public Library, where he went through
every single reference in the book -- and
he found a record of fraud that you cannot
believe. Well, the New York intellectual
community is a pretty small place, and
pretty soon everybody knew about this,
everybody knew the book was a fraud and it
was going to be exposed sooner or later.
The one journal that was smart enough to
react intelligently was the New York
Review of Books -- they knew that the
thing was a sham, but the editor didn't
want to offend his friends, so he just
didn't run a review at all. That was the
one journal that didn't run a review. Meanwhile, Finkelstein was being called
in by big professors in the field who were
telling him, "Look, call off your crusade;
you drop this and we'll take care of you,
we'll make sure you get a job," all this
kind of stuff. But he kept doing it -- he
kept on and on. Every time there was a
favorable review, he'd write a letter to
the editor which wouldn't get printed; he
was doing whatever he could do. We
approached the publishers and asked them
if they were going to respond to any of
this, and they said no -- and they were
right. Why should they respond? They had
the whole system buttoned up, there was
never going to be a critical word about
this in the United States. But then they
made a technical error: they allowed the
book to appear in England, where you can't
control the intellectual community quite
as easily. Well, as soon as I heard that the book
was going to come out in England, I
immediately sent copies of Finkelstein's
work to a number of British scholars and
journalists who are interested in the
Middle East -- and they were ready. As
soon as the book appeared, it was just
demolished, it was blown out of the water.
Every major journal, the Times Literary
Supplement, the London Review,
The Observer, everybody had a
review saying, this doesn't even reach the
level of nonsense, of idiocy. A lot of the
criticism used Finkelstein's work without
any acknowledgment, I should say -- but
about the kindest word anybody said about
the book was "ludicrous," or
"preposterous." Well, people here read British reviews
-- if you're in the American intellectual
community, you read the Times Literary
Supplement and the London
Review, so it began to get a little
embarrassing. You started getting
back-tracking: people started saying,
"Well, look, I didn't really say the book
was good, I just said it's an interesting
topic," things like that. At that point,
the New York Review swung into
action, and they did what they always do
in these circumstances. See, there's like
a routine that you go through -- if a book
gets blown out of the water in England in
places people here will see, or if a book
gets praised in England, you have to
react. And if it's a book on Israel,
there's a standard way of doing it: you
get an Israeli scholar to review it.
That's called covering your ass -- because
whatever an Israeli scholar says, you're
pretty safe: no one can accuse the journal
of anti-Semitism, none of the usual stuff
works. So after the Peters book got blown out
of the water in England, the New York
Review assigned it to a good person
actually, in fact Israel's leading
specialist on Palestinian nationalism
[Yehoshua Porath], someone
who knows a lot about the subject. And he
wrote a review, which they then didn't
publish -- it went on for almost a year
without the thing being published; nobody
knows exactly what was going on, but you
can guess that there must have been a lot
of pressure not to publish it. Eventually
it was even written up in the New York
Times that this review wasn't getting
published, so finally some version of it
did appear. It was critical, it said the
book is nonsense and so on, but it cut
corners, the guy didn't say what he
knew. Actually, the Israeli reviews in
general were extremely critical: the
reaction of the Israeli press was that
they hoped the book would not be widely
read, because ultimately it would be
harmful to the Jews -- sooner or later it
would get exposed, and then it would just
look like a fraud and a hoax, and it would
reflect badly on Israel. They
underestimated the American intellectual
community, I should say. Anyhow, by that point the American
intellectual community realized that the
Peters book was an embarrassment, and it
sort of disappeared -- nobody talks about
it anymore. I mean, you still find it at
newsstands in the airport and so on, but
the best and the brightest know that they
are not supposed to talk about it anymore:
because it was exposed and they were
exposed. Well, the point is, what happened to
Finkelstein is the kind of thing that can
happen when you're an honest critic -- and
we could go on and on with other cases
like that. [Editors' Note:
Finkelstein has since published several
books with independent
presses.] Still, in the universities or in any
other institution, you can often find some
dissidents hanging around in the woodwork
-- and they can survive in one fashion or
another, particularly if they get
community support. But if they become too
disruptive or too obstreperous -- or you
know, too effective -- they're likely to
be kicked out. The standard thing, though, is that
they won't make it within the institutions
in the first place, particularly if they
were that way when they were young --
they'll simply be weeded out somewhere
along the line. So in most cases, the
people who make it through the
institutions and are able to remain in
them have already internalized the right
kinds of beliefs: it's not a problem for
them to be obedient, they already are
obedient, that's how they got there. And
that's pretty much how the ideological
control system perpetuates itself in the
schools -- that's the basic story of how
it operates, I think. Related
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