Lying About Hitler

History, Holocaust, and the David Irving Trial

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Last edited by ImportBot
December 20, 2023 | History

Lying About Hitler

History, Holocaust, and the David Irving Trial

  • 0 Ratings
  • 12 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 2 Have read

"Last Year, in the most famous Holocaust court case since the Adolf Eichmann trial, controversial author David Irving brought a libel suit against Penguin Books UK and author Deborah Lipstadt, who had denounced Irving in print as one of the most dangerous Holocaust deniers at work today. As the chief historical adviser to Penguin Books in its successful defense of Lipstadt, Richard J. Evans spent two years of research in preparation for this case.

In Lying About Hitler, Evans uses the trial as a lens for exploring a range of vital questions such as who was responsible for violence and genocide against the Jews in Nazi Germany, what Hitler knew and when, and how far his henchmen Himmler and Goebbels and Nazi officials in the SS acted on their own initiative in organizing the violence and mass murder perpetrated by the Nazi regime against the Jews.".

"In ruling against David Irving in April 2000, the High Court in London labeled him a falsifier of history. No objective historian, declared the Judge, would manipulate the documentary record in the way that Irving did. Yet, one could ask, is a court of law the appropriate place to debate history? Can it really settle issues of objectivity and bias in the study of the past? Don't all historians in the end bring a subjective agenda to bear on their reading of the evidence?

The judgment branded Irving a racist, an anti-Semite and an active supporter of neo-fascism. Is it possible, though, that he lost his case not because of his biased history but because his agenda was unaceptable? Evans answers these questions and more in ways that may surprise many of the commentators and pundits on the trial.

While most people would share the court's views of Irving's work, some commentators have feared that the verdict will make it all but impossible to question the accepted version of the Holocaust."--BOOK JACKET.

Publish Date
Publisher
Basic Books
Language
English
Pages
318

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Telling Lies about Hitler
Cover of: Lying About Hitler
Lying About Hitler: History, Holocaust, and the David Irving Trial
April 16, 2002, Basic Books
in English
Cover of: Telling Lies About Hitler
Telling Lies About Hitler: The Holocaust, History and the David Irving Trial
September 2002, Verso
Paperback in English
Cover of: Telling Lies about Hitler
Telling Lies about Hitler
2002, Penguin Random House
in English
Cover of: Lying About Hitler
Lying About Hitler: History, Holocaust, and the David Irving Trial
March 6, 2001, Basic Books
in English
Cover of: Der Geschichtsfälscher

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Book Details


First Sentence

"What is historical objectivity?"

Classifications

Library of Congress
KD379.5.I78 E95 2001

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL7593359M
Internet Archive
lyingabouthitler00evan
ISBN 10
0465021522
ISBN 13
9780465021529
LCCN
00140130
OCLC/WorldCat
45707725
Library Thing
111958
Goodreads
915952

Work Description

In April 2000 a High Court judge branded the writer David Irving a racist, an antisemite, a Holocaust denier, and a falsifier of history. The key expert witness against Irving was the Cambridge historian Richard J. Evans who describes here, in a book which several publishers have been intimidated to withdrawing, his involvement in the case. Recounting his discovery of Irving’s connections with far right Holocaust deniers in the United States and of how Irving falsified the documentary evidence on the Second World War, Evans reflects generally and eloquently on the interaction of historical and legal rules of evidence.

Evans argues that the Irving trial does for the twenty-first century what the Eichmann trial did for the second half of the twentieth. It vindicates history’s ability to come to reasoned conclusions on the basis of a careful examination of the evidence, even when eyewitnesses and survivors are no longer around to tell the tale.

(Source: Verso Books)

Excerpts

What is historical objectivity?
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