Couple of articles on and by Eugene Genovese, M.E. Bradford letter to NYRB. BTW, Elizabeth Fox-Genovese blurbed a new book by Midge Decter, wife of Norman Podhoretz. Michael Pugliese
http://www.wpunj.edu/~newpol/issue23/lichte23.htm
("Right Church, Wrong Pew:Eugene Genovese & Southern Conservatism, " by Alex Lichtenstein."
http://www.hup.harvard.edu/reviews/GENSOU_R.html
Lingua franca -- September 1997 ... he stunned his audience into silence with the letter he had sent to Eugene Genovese, who had complained of being spurned by the journal: "Dear Professor Genovese, Fuck you." Then there was Davis's terrifying collection of pets. The ... http://www.linguafranca.com/9709/shatz.html
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/6160 ("The New York Review of Books June 30, 1983
LINCOLN'S 'ASIATIC STYLE' By M.E. Bradford, Reply by Alfred Kazin In response to "Saving the Free World: An Exchange" (May 12, 1983)
To the Editors:
I have followed with interest Alfred Kazin's remarks on my opinions and political history and Eugene Genovese's generous response as they have appeared in your pages for March 31 and May 12. I do not write to contribute to this discussion but rather to correct certain careless errors of fact in Mr. Kazin's essay. I will pass without comment his contention that Irving Kristol knows anything about my "views." That is another quarrel. But he should know that I was never nominated to be Chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities. There were only rumors to that effectto which there was a well-orchestrated response. Furthermore, Gertrude Himmelfarb was not appointed to the Council, which advises the leaders of NEH, by Dr. William Bennet. Such appointments come only from the President. The only appointment I received was to the Board of Foreign Scholarships.
In his response to Genovese's letter published May 12, Mr. Kazin writes that I described the Gettysburg Address as "an association of Lincoln and Oriental despotism." This is to misread my remarks in A Better Guide Than Reason, where I argue that there is an analogy between Lincoln's use of epidictic rhetoric and what the ancient rhetoricians call the "Asiatic style"the idiom of priests/kings. The distinction is significant. In "Saving My Soul at the Plaza" Mr. Kazin observes that I have criticized Lincoln for violating due process in issuing the Emancipation Proclamation. I've written nothing about Lincoln and the war powers and indeed have no reason to doubt that they are sufficient to authorize confiscation of propertyof whatever kind. Mr. Kazin got his opinion from unsigned matter in The New Republic for December 16, 1981, for he repeats the error made there. I would welcome a careful examination of my writings by The New York Review of Books, however critical the results might be. But I do not care for ignorant misrepresentation.
M.E. Bradford
Irving, Texas
Alfred Kazin replies: On the matters of fact relating to Professor Bradford's supposed nomination as NEH director, I will take his word for it. I have to add, however, that he seems to me a most unfortunate man. His views of the "irrepressible conflict" are so abstract, and his sanctification of southern life so unhistorical, that he inevitably lends himself to rumors and "misrepresentation."
Professor Bradford's reading of the Gettysburg Address as a rhetorical exercise in "Asiatic style" is insulting to Lincoln's idea of liberty and, if Professor Bradford means it at all, a piece of self-deception.
Nothing I have read by Professor Bradford indicates awareness that his cherished valueswhich he thinks still operate in the Southrested on human servitude. The charge against Professor Bradford was his supposed claim that Lincoln had violated due process, the slaveowners' rights of property, in issuing the Emancipation Proclamation. And what does Professor Bradford's letter say? He has "no reason to doubt that they [the war powers] are sufficient to authorize confiscation of propertyof whatever kind" (my italics).
Lingua Franca ... lack of critical perspective in James Surowiecki's portrait of Eugene Genovese ["Genovese's March," December/January]. While Surowiecki may have intended to let Genovese's contradictions and more outrageous statements "speak for ... http://www.linguafranca.com/Discussion/LettersToE.html
http://www.dissentmagazine.org/indexes/9495.html Genovese, Eugene D. The Question (with responses by Mitchell Cohen, Eric Foner, Robin D. G. Kelley, Alice Kessler-Harris, Christine Stansell, and Sean Wilentz and a riposte by Genovese)
1994, 371