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Roger Casement: 16Lives, by Angus Mitchell
Bücher Herunterladen Roger Casement: 16Lives, by Angus Mitchell
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Pressestimmen
the latest volume in the superb 16 Lives series -- RTE Guide fascinating -- Clare County Express fascinating -- Choice Magazine Angus Mitchell ... has erected an essential pillar in the pantheon series 16 Lives, which explores sixteen individuals who were executed after the 1916 Easter Rising with an eye on the guideline of the prompt "Who were these people and what drove them to commit themselves to violent revolution?" -- Dublin Review of Books Angus Mitchell provides a thoroughly developed and detailed map to follow and understand Casement's footprints in history -- Dublin Review of Books this is both a narrative and a sourcebook for understanding Sir Roger Casement -- Dublin Review of Books Mitchell steers the reader through the many aspects of Casement's life and afterlife with a steady hand at the tiller -- Books Ireland rich ... Mitchell weaves Casement's attuned sense of suffering through the Congo to gunrunning in Howth, the infamous Black Diaries and his death, reminding us that his legacy is of furthering an understanding of human rights -- Irish Times there is much to admire in this book -- Irish Echo excellent ... Angus Mitchell, the foremost authority on Casement, has written a superlative book about the humanitarian pioneer and Irish patriot ... I heartily recommend this book -- irishtimes.com sympathetic and well-structured study ... admirable contribution to a timely series of studies of the sixteen men executed for their part in the rebellion of 1916 -- `Brea' Digital Journal of Irish Studies
Über den Autor und weitere Mitwirkende
Angus Mitchell was born in Africa and educated in England. From 1987 to 1992 he lived in Spain where he wrote extensively on Spanish culture, food and cinema and published the widely-acclaimed Spain: Interiors, Gardens, Architecture, Landscape (Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1992). From 1992-98 he lived in Brazil where he worked as a film and television correspondent and helped to develop the award-winning historical drama, Carlota Joaquina: Princess of Brazil (1995). Since 1998, he has lived in Ireland. For over two decades, he has studied the life and legacy of Roger Casement and a group of associated radicals, pacifists, feminists, cosmopolitan nationalists, internationalists and other critics of empire. To date, his published research has focussed largely on Roger Casement's work in Africa and South America. In 1997, he edited and annotated The Amazon Journal of Roger Casement (Dublin: Lilliput Press & London: Anaconda Editions). In 2003, there appeared a companion volume Sir Roger Casement's Heart of Darkness: The 1911 Documents (Dublin: Irish Manuscripts Commission). These editions helped to retrieve Casement into the history of human rights and situated him within a progressive anti-colonial dialogue in pre-First World War Britain. The work also reinvigorated academic interest in Casement and the controversies associated with his life and afterlife. Much of the early research for this body of work was undertaken while Mitchell was resident in South America, where he travelled widely on the Amazon and revisited the principal locations where Casement stayed when consul general in Brazil. His work has cast vital new light on Casement's entanglement with British intelligence and the enduring puzzle over the authenticity of the nefarious Black Diaries, the documents that have largely defined Casement's myth in the public imagination. Mitchell has long made the argument, along with other reputable historians, that these documents are forgeries. In 2010, Mitchell initiated and helped to curate, with Professor Laura Izarra at the University of Sao Paulo, a series of exhibitions on Roger Casement that helped to alert a wider international audience to the importance of Casement as both an intellectual and an activist. The exhibition opened in Manaus on the Amazon in 2010. It then moved to the Centro Maria Antonia in Sao Paulo, where it was launched by the Irish Ambassador to Brazil. In 2012, it opened in the presence of the Nobel Laureate for Literature, Mario Vargas Llosa, at the prestigious Casa de America in Madrid. The exhibition is currently being revised for an African tour. It will open in Maputo, Mozambique in 2013. A Spanish edition of The Amazon Journal of Roger Casement (La Coruna: Ediciones del Viento) appeared in 2011. A Portuguese edition will be published by the University of Sao Paulo in 2014. Mitchell is currently looking at other individuals involved in the cultural politics of the early twentieth century. These include the historian Alice Stopford Green, the botanist, Augustine Henry, and the evangelical faith missionary and divine, Henry Grattan Guinness, who established the earliest mission stations on the lower Congo. From 2004- 2009, Mitchell worked as a university lecturer in both the U.S. and Ireland. He now devotes himself full-time to writing, guest lecturing, parenting and gardening. Mitchell's work has appeared in various international, academic and mainstream journals. He sits on the editorial board of History Ireland and is a regular contributor to the on-line Dublin Review of Books. Most recently he annotated two extensive extracts from Casement's German diaries for Field Day Review 8:2012. He lives in the mid-west of Ireland.
Produktinformation
Taschenbuch: 432 Seiten
Verlag: O'Brien Press Ltd (3. Oktober 2013)
Sprache: Englisch
ISBN-10: 1847172644
ISBN-13: 978-1847172648
Größe und/oder Gewicht:
12,7 x 3,2 x 20,3 cm
Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung:
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Nr. 781.144 in Fremdsprachige Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Fremdsprachige Bücher)
This an excellent book on one of the key figures in the Irish nationalist movement and a key participant in the 1916 Easter Rising. In addition to his work for Irish independence, Casement is an interesting figure because of his humanitarian work in the Belgian Congo and South America. I recommend this series of books to anyone who is interested in the Irish nationalist movement.
Well researched and written clearly
This book describes the work of a great humanitarian. It gives a moving account of his trial and last days, but it is far more hagiography than history, and proves disappointing.It contains a number of “terminological inexactitudes†and misunderstandings. Churchill’s famous retort to Baldwin, “I shall write ... history†(p. 366), has a double meaning that Mr Mitchell misses. Edward Carson never prosecuted Oscar Wilde (p. 84), and the “parallels†Mr Mitchell sees between Casement’s and “the trial and public humiliation of both Charles Stewart Parnell and Oscar Wilde†(p. 330) are illusory. Wilde brought his trial and humiliation on himself by his hubris, and it was Parnell’s arrogance that led to his humiliation by his own party after he was cited in a civil divorce court. There is no evidence of British state machinations in either of those cases, unlike in Casement’s; rather, a British Commission of Enquiry exonerated Parnell in the Pigott case.Some “inexactitudes†are mistakes that no historian should make. The “letter of sympathy [the Kaiser sent] to Kruger, which aroused fierce reaction in England†was in fact a telegram of congratulations on the defeat of the Jameson Raid “without appealing to the help of friendly powersâ€, an implicit offer of German support for the Boers. Winston Churchill’s “support for the leaders of the Ulster Volunteer Force†is surprising given his vocal and public support for Home Rule and the physical attack made on him by Loyalists. Perhaps Mr Mitchell was thinking of Sir Winston’s long-dead father?Historical exactitude may not be Mr Mitchell’s prime concern. His presentation of Carson as persecutor (sic) of another Irishman may be an attempt to “poison the wellâ€; an “association fallacy†implies that Carson was engaged in the Crown’s prosecution of Casement, though by then Carson had resigned from Cabinet. Every well from which any of Casement’s critics might drink is subtly poisoned. That IPP members refused to condemn the King of the Belgians on religious grounds may be right (the claim is unsourced), but what’s the relevance? Mention of “Britain’s lucrative slave trade†in the eighteenth century has no more relevance to Casement’s concerns with humanitarian horrors in the twentieth than that Leopold II was “a first cousin of Queen Victoriaâ€. If the relationship is moot so is Victoria’s dislike of her cousin but Mr Mitchell leaves this out.He claims that the Putamayo atrocities destroyed Casement’s “beliefs in the ‘civilising’ potential of the British Empire†but undermines his own claim. The Peruvian Amazon Company was run by South Americans and while it was registered in London, and had British capital invested, over 3.5 million companies are registered in London, and even if investors knew where their money went they could not have known the conditions in Putamayo until Casement exposed them. The result of that was a parliamentary investigation that led to tightening of anti-slavery legislation across the Empire—a rather civilising measure, any intelligent reader must think. Mr Mitchell acknowledges the advocacy of the British ambassador to Washington in “apply[ing] pressure on the Peruvian government†to end the abuses (p. 148); and elsewhere (p. 110), he quotes Casement’s “appeal to the humanity of England†to end the Congo atrocities.Inaccuracies, irrelevancies, inconsistencies and contradictions abound. The sort of “internationalism†that Mr Mitchell imputes to Casement would have been anathema to an Advanced Nationalist. If Casement perceived an independent Ireland better served by links with Continental Europe than with Britain, he did so on the whimsical grounds that “early Europe was very largely Celtic Europe, and nowhere can we trace the continuous influence of Celtic culture and idealism, coming down to us from a remote past, save in Ireland only†(“The Romance of Irish Historyâ€). This suggests that Casement looked toward Ancient Ireland to set a standard for modern Europe, not toward the philosophy of a refugee from the German Reich who advocated revolution from the safety of Britain.Evidence of Casement’s simplistic understanding of history is never harder to find than his biographer’s endorsement of such understanding. Elsewhere in this essay Casement claims: “[Sir Hugh] O’Neill would have driven Elizabeth from Ireland, and a sovereign State would today be the guardian of the freedom of the western seas for Europe and the worldâ€.The unromantic facts are that O’Neill was a warlord with no concept of Casement’s nationalism, far less internationalism, as ready to work with the English as MacMurrough had been to hire Norman mercenaries. Until Elizabeth refused to appoint him Lord President of Ulster O’Neill fought for her, and changed sides only when that better served his personal ambition.Casement’s misinterpretation of the Nine Years’ War and his analysis of its counterfactual outcome reveal both extravagant hostility to Britain and naïveté. His hostility as an Irish nationalist is of course understandable, but it blinds him to historical reality, and Mr Mitchell, rather than applying a corrective analysis, endorses Casement’s views. He claims that the failure of Britain’s Continental enemies over the centuries was because “they underestimated Ireland’s significance†(p. 218). Defeat in military and naval engagements had rather more to do with things. Those enemies were well aware of “Ireland’s significanceâ€, up to France and Russia’s half-baked invasion wheeze of 1902 and Germany’s of 1916.The most perturbing mystery of Casement’s life is his relationship with the Second Reich. In THE CRIME AGAINST EUROPE he claims “We must find the motive for England allying herself with France and Russia in an admittedly anti-German ‘understanding’ if we would understand the causes of the present warâ€; he proceeds from there to “understand†the war in light of the Anglophobia shared by Germans and Advanced Nationalists and claims that “only a German victory could deliver a true balance of power in Europeâ€. The Reich’s aim was European hegemony, not a balance of power, so this is self-evident nonsense. One expects a corrective from an historian, however sympathetic to his subject, but again Mr Mitchell nods along, claiming that “a host of studies ... endorse several of Casement’s opinions and arguments articulated in THE CRIME AGAINST EUROPE" (p. 368).A host of “studies†indeed exonerated Germany of responsibility for the Great War and some even “proved†that Britain provoked it. All these “studies†were sponsored by the Zentralstelle für Erforschung der Kriegschuldfrage. Best known were those by Harry Elmer Barnes, Sid Fay and Arthur Ponsonby, a Casement admirer, whose FALSEHOOD IN WARTIME “proved†that the Rape of Belgium was a myth. Then Luigi Albertini let the cat out of the German bag, the FALSEHOOD report and Barnes were discredited, and Fay conceded. These “studies†endorse only the brilliance of German propagandists even before Göbbels, and it’s depressing when an historian invokes them to try to vindicate earlier German propaganda, to the detriment of his own discipline.Mr Mitchell is closer to the mark when he says: “the First World War was a deliberate counter-revolutionary strike by reactionary ruling elements in Europe against democratic trends†(p. 368). Since 1912 the Social Democrats had been the largest party in the Reichstag, and Germany planned to use war measures to roll back this democratic “menace†and impose full autocracy on the Reich. Is it German worries about democracy that Mr Mitchell has in mind?It was not with German domestic or imperial matters that Casement was concerned either. He denounced the “atrocious conduct of the Germans†in Kamerun (p. 53), but said nothing about the later and far worse atrocities in Südwestafrika and Ostafrika. The first of these coincided with his conversion to Irish nationalism. One of the great disappointments in an otherwise-admirable life is Casement’s failure to condemn deliberate genocide in these German colonies---or even allude to it.Rather, he claims (in The Crime Against Europe) that “German Militarism ... has not been employed beyond the frontiers of Germany until last year [1914]â€. His earlier remarks about Kamerun directly contradict this assertion and the later bloody campaigns were infamous. Even before Kamerun, as a career diplomat he would have known about German denunciation of “negrophilist English administration†in Africa, foreshadowing the Reich’s proto-Nazi form of colonialism there. Was Casement a brazen liar---or a consummate self-deceiver? Did he have a psychological problem, the possibility of which sometimes worried him? (Fear of the family strain of insanity is something else that Mr Mitchell fails to address.) Embittered by his experiences, Casement complains to his diary in April 1916 “that Germany tried to incite a revolt ... in Ireland by a paltry gift of second-hand rifles put in the hands of excitable young menâ€, but he impetuously reverts to support for the Reich later, so Joseph Conrad’s assessment that he was governed by emotion rather than intellect seems shrewder than Mr Mitchell credits (pp. 47-49).It’s difficult not to conclude that Casement’s refusal to condemn Germany was rooted in sheer Anglophobia, if not cognitive impairment. Quite apart from what he attested to in Kamerun, he saw too much of the Rape of Belgium to pretend that it did not happen---“a gruesome sight, and ... a horrible storyâ€---yet his response is deeply disquieting: “I feel there may be in this awful lesson to the Belgian people a repayment†for what was done in the Congo (pp. 237-38).If he merely sought to equate two wrongs as a right it would be morally bad enough; but Casement knew that “what was done in the Congo†was done not by the Belgian people, or even in their name, but by an autocrat, a private gendarmerie and native mercenaries. Absolutely not by the thousands of old men (one over eighty), women and children (one under three weeks) murdered by the Germans in 1914.Casement justifies the Reich’s invasion, violation of a neutral country and breach of an international treaty because “[Germany] only asked for a right of wayâ€. As a professional diplomat he knew that the Treaty of London mandated defence against breach of neutrality so this is disingenuous and shameless propaganda. Any humanitarian should have denounced Germany but Casement instead downplayed and excused murder and rapine.How could a decent man justify such evil? One looks in vain for hard questions such as this in Mr Mitchell’s hagiography, far less for satisfactory answers.Instead Mr Mitchell prefers to “prove†that “the Black Diaries are indeed forgeries†(pp. 17-18), marshalling circumstance and innuendo to constitute an army of “faulty generalisations†to fight his case. Protestations of innocence by obviously vested interests do not constitute convincing argument, and while no fair-minded historian would argue that Dr Audrey Giles’ analysis of the Black Diaries is beyond criticism, no critical reader of a book that would dismiss those Diaries as forgery can fail to wonder at its author’s evasion of engagement with a forensic analysis that flatly contradicts his thesis.Casement did much to expose what George Orwell would later call “the dirty work of Empire†and his hanging must trouble even those already troubled by the disastrous foolishness of his consorting with the Second Reich and his attempts to cover up German atrocities in Africa and Europe. Mr Mitchell’s fixation on the alleged forging of his Diaries distracts him from the fact that, forged or not, unscrupulous deployment of those Diaries by certain elements arguably compromised British justice. He does eventually address this issue, but he might have said more had his focus not been elsewhere.History needs anti-revisionism as much as revisionism in order to thrive, but more than anything it needs intellectual rigour. This book would never get the imprimatur of a university press in Britain or the USA and the University of Limerick cannot have enhanced its academic standing by endorsing it.
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