Disgraced Historians : Irving, Ambrose, Foote, Bellesiles, Churchill, Goodwin, & Cinel

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  • Опубликовано: 21 сен 2024

Комментарии • 936

  • @CynicalHistorian
    @CynicalHistorian  10 дней назад +56

    Thanks for watching! Please consider supporting the channel by buying merch: cynical-historian-shop.fourthwall.com
    Or by donating to my Patreon: www.patreon.com/CynicalHistorian
    Click "read more" for corrections and bibliography. First, here are some related videos:
    Original scholarship playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLjnwpaclU4wUSSIUw8fPp1SjwFxOj3wD2
    Anti-conspiracism playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLjnwpaclU4wWS-H7U62SqWWEA-y2eqzoQ
    2016 movie roundup: ruclips.net/video/Ub0-yFQFyJ8/видео.html
    D'Souza propaganda: ruclips.net/video/pS-dqX9dZgk/видео.html
    Historian Annoyances: ruclips.net/video/4J6IPhEkYmo/видео.html
    Moral Panics: ruclips.net/video/7pyiLdRWdy0/видео.html
    Culture War: ruclips.net/video/tppeGYoWDxg/видео.html
    Lost Cause: ruclips.net/video/4J6IPhEkYmo/видео.html
    *[reserved for Errata]*
    *Bibliography*
    James M. Banner, The Ever-Changing Past: Why All History Is Revisionist History (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2021). amzn.to/3y0Y8er
    Jeremy Black, Clio’s Battles: Historiography in Practice (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2015). amzn.to/3N3bFfY
    Peter Charles Hoffer, Past Imperfect: Facts, Fictions, Fraud - American History from Bancroft and Parkman to Ambrose, Bellesiles, Ellis, and Goodwin (New York: Public Affairs, 2004). amzn.to/2OQJh0m
    William M. Lamont, Historical Controversies and Historians (London: UCL Press, 1998). amzn.to/49SF1XY
    Ron Theodore Robin, Scandals and Scoundrels: Seven Cases That Shook the Academy (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004). amzn.to/49Rdkip
    Michael Shermer, Alex Grobma, and Arthur Hertzberg. Denying History: Who Says the Holocaust Never Happened and Why Do They Say It? (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000). amzn.to/47NtzuY
    Jon Wiener, Historians in Trouble: Plagiarism Fraud and Politics in the Ivory Tower (New York: New Press, 2005). amzn.to/47yzV1M

    • @bradhorowitz2765
      @bradhorowitz2765 9 дней назад

      Leave it to Ken Burns to have not one but two historians who committed fraud…and to keep on using them even after their actions are revealed.
      Could you do a video on Ken burns? His failure to conduct historical research, spreading information, and whitewashing history not only regarding race but also gender and sexuality?

    • @robk8463
      @robk8463 9 дней назад

      Be careful Cypher! It's a slippery slope into being a cat-channel! 😂😂😂😻😻😻

    • @PizzaRanger
      @PizzaRanger 9 дней назад

      @@robk8463 your pinned comments are so GOAT'd. Im not even in history but I wish I were so I could use your videos x;D

    • @angamaitesangahyando685
      @angamaitesangahyando685 7 дней назад +2

      I disagree with your introductory point about disgrace. Look at such areas of Bible scholarship which contradict the Christian dogma - namely, the historicity of Jesus (Richard Carrier) or he Homeric influence on th Bible (Dennis McDonald). Both are reputed historians, and yet both have come out claming to have been suppressed and disregarded by academia at large. This pertains to your second part about "bigotry" - I'm sure Christian theologically-minded pseudo-historians would call those two "bigots" for advancing their well-sourced models, just the way you're calling Irving a bigot. In the end, all subjective squabbling...
      - Adûnâi

    • @DoctorX101
      @DoctorX101 7 дней назад

      @@angamaitesangahyando685 Carrier was never "reputed" and McDonald's was done decades before. Carrier is certainly not being "suppressed"; his actions have done that enough.
      Nevertheless, your larger point is correct, but this has been carried out by mainstream scholarship over the last century. Schweitzer did what Carrier wished he could do over a hundred years ago.
      What is interesting, en passant, is you are still gathering the majority of graduate students from a pool of the religious. The academic reality forces a dropping of the "Bible = Fact" belief rather quickly. Bart Eardman is one example: started as a fundamentalist, went to the Moody Bible Institute of all places.
      How these deal with these issues is fascinating. The smart and successful ones try to separate their fantasies from the facts, but it is not easy.
      However, David Irving is a bigot. I would refer you to the writings of Christopher Hitchens who WANTED to believe him since it fit his political views, but then he got to know Irving. Irving was comfortable enough to crack racist jokes.

  • @josephallsen3135
    @josephallsen3135 9 дней назад +502

    My beloved older brother is a retired professor. One of his students committed the absolutely stupidest act of plagiarism. Here is the note he put on the student's paper. It said "This is really good writing. I know because I wrote it. See me in my office after class".

    • @TylerD288
      @TylerD288 9 дней назад +19

      Ouch!

    • @vulpes7079
      @vulpes7079 9 дней назад +28

      If that were me, I'd just drop out

    • @donnagant6575
      @donnagant6575 9 дней назад +15

      That sounds made up

    • @garyghiorzi2555
      @garyghiorzi2555 9 дней назад

      That's what i thought ​@@donnagant6575

    • @josephallsen3135
      @josephallsen3135 9 дней назад +30

      @@vulpes7079 Actually he never saw the kid again.

  • @peterhill8398
    @peterhill8398 8 дней назад +82

    One British historian said ‘Ambrose doesn’t write history, he writes monuments’. And no, he didn’t mean it as a compliment.

    • @dlxmarks
      @dlxmarks 5 дней назад +4

      I would phrase it as "Ambrose didn't write history, he sold history." And he never let professional standards get in the way of a publishing deadline nor did he miss a chance to profit on others' deeds.

  • @daemonspudguy
    @daemonspudguy 9 дней назад +249

    The most important disgraced historian is Woodrow Wilson.
    *WILSON!!!!!!!!!!!!*

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  9 дней назад +89

      Sadly, not disgraced

    • @daemonspudguy
      @daemonspudguy 9 дней назад +30

      @@CynicalHistorian truly sad. He is definitely disgraceful then.

    • @SonicRyan1992
      @SonicRyan1992 9 дней назад +23

      all my homies hate Woodrow Wilson

    • @blox4513
      @blox4513 9 дней назад

      @@CynicalHistorian He tricked the US into a world war and a private central banking system, Who the hell is he not disgraced?!?

    • @user-gi8pk9uc7q
      @user-gi8pk9uc7q 9 дней назад +17

      Oh yes, the worst confederate apologist of them all!

  • @JRWall-hf9mq
    @JRWall-hf9mq 9 дней назад +216

    "You can get away with fraud if you're an economist..." Yeah. that tracks.

    • @deamoncohln9506
      @deamoncohln9506 9 дней назад +5

      ​@@drj-pp8hwyall are jokes anyway

    • @aprotosis
      @aprotosis 9 дней назад +15

      @@drj-pp8hw Lott last published in 2014 because he retired from economic research, founding the Crime Prevention Research Center. I guess he found out there is more money in being a political pundit. Even though he has many examples of misconduct and fraud, he continues today to be cited in academic papers without any negativity and his new works through his institution are repeated by politicians and news organizations as if they were fact or established research while Lott does what he can to encourage this. In 2023, he was sited 509 times in other published papers and is up to 326 so far this year.

    • @colinmiddleton9444
      @colinmiddleton9444 9 дней назад +11

      So many people do not bother to maintain any standards of integrity or accuracy. The viewing public can easily get pumped full of falsehoods.

    • @Ugly_German_Truths
      @Ugly_German_Truths 8 дней назад

      isn't Fraud what economics is all about?

    • @surretrett
      @surretrett 7 дней назад

      Or if you’re a social scientist.

  • @lostbutfreesoul
    @lostbutfreesoul 9 дней назад +206

    When an Economist lies in a paper?
    It is just Marketing....

    • @AntiSocialPropaganda
      @AntiSocialPropaganda 8 дней назад +3

      They get away with it all the time. Let me recommend you a really good video about it

    • @RickFruckberry
      @RickFruckberry 7 дней назад

      "What's the difference between an economist and a senile man with a calculator?"
      What?
      "I'm asking you?"
      Hahaha!

    • @hattielankford4775
      @hattielankford4775 7 дней назад +5

      We need to implement heavy, enforced marketing regulations. Fifty years ago would be better, but now will do.

    • @AntiSocialPropaganda
      @AntiSocialPropaganda 7 дней назад +5

      @@hattielankford4775 What if we tried to do that and the rich just lobbies against it like they always do.
      It would inconvenience them too much to not be able to lie about how good the system they benefit from is

    • @Hà-GECNguyễnNgọc
      @Hà-GECNguyễnNgọc 7 дней назад

      @@AntiSocialPropaganda please do

  • @hailhydra7959
    @hailhydra7959 8 дней назад +107

    I think historians give the ‘Civil War A Narrative’ books a bad rap for not sourcing properly. After all, every volume is pure Foote notes.

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  8 дней назад +37

      💀death by pun

    • @stevensica5918
      @stevensica5918 7 дней назад +11

      You really struggled to pull off that pin.

    • @DoctorX101
      @DoctorX101 7 дней назад +9

      Do we deserve this . . .
      . . . punishment?

    • @theodosios2615
      @theodosios2615 7 дней назад +2

      Ah, I see what you did there.

    • @DoctorX101
      @DoctorX101 7 дней назад

      @@theodosios2615 So you concede . . .
      ( •_•)
      ( •_•)>⌐■-■
      (⌐■_■)
      . . . defeat?

  • @misterjaxon2559
    @misterjaxon2559 9 дней назад +226

    Economics was invented to make astrology look respectable.

    • @Leo_Pard_A4
      @Leo_Pard_A4 7 дней назад +5

      Nice

    • @paulelephant9521
      @paulelephant9521 4 дня назад

      Sorry, but I'm definitely going to plagiarize that quote! Is that your own work? That sounds a bit snarky, sorry, just wanted to know if the quote had provenance :)

    • @misterjaxon2559
      @misterjaxon2559 4 дня назад

      @@paulelephant9521 I am tempted to claim it as my own, which is ironic considering the topic at hand, but alas, I can't. To the best of my recollection, it was sent to me a few years ago. I have a friend who collects amusing or strange news items in the course of the year and then prints them off and includes them with his Christmas cards. You know, silly stuff like, "Would-be burglar cuts through roof and drops into store that is open 24 hours a day" or ironic stuff like, "President of local Mothers Against Drunk Driving arrested for DUI." He also includes amusing saying like the one at hand. It had no attribution. He may have come up with it himself. He is a retired physics professor and we share the same outlook on crappy methodology, pseudoscience, etc. (We actually met as volunteers on an archeological dig and sat wide-eyed staring at each other as the lead archeologist took a couple bent metal rods and tried to "dowse" for a Civil War era burial.) Anyway, no attribution and I am sure that like all those "a guy walks into a bar" jokes, it can be passed along without anybody raising a stink about it. But, thanks for asking.

    • @mmfood3004
      @mmfood3004 3 дня назад +2

      @@ladymacbethofmtensk896 Freud is far from the most influential name in psychology. A fact which really undermines your comment. It does illustrate your ignorance beautifully though.

  • @jayfrank1913
    @jayfrank1913 9 дней назад +87

    Don't forget that Vonnegut was in Dresden during the fire bombing and helped dispose of bodies, yet he still believed Irving's excessive estimates.
    It goes to show that even each eyewitness to a huge event can perceive it drastically differently.
    It also seemed that when Irving's downfall came, Vonnegut was more called out more at the time because he was more famous. Vonnegut didn't study the event, he took place in it and read the current popular history on it

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  9 дней назад +78

      To the naked eye, there's not much difference between 5,000 and 50,000. It's just a sea of corpses that were alive a mere day prior. Plus, Vonnegut was a POW, so I wouldn't be surprised if he heard the propaganda straight from the source and simply used Irving as verification of that traumatic memory

    • @icook1723
      @icook1723 7 дней назад +4

      ​@@CynicalHistorian
      When you read first hand accounts, they often over state the loss of life.

    • @WoobooRidesAgain
      @WoobooRidesAgain 7 дней назад +12

      @@dbarker7794 Sure, but Vonnegut's book was also a massive signal booster to Irving's theories, and arguably helped the man himself become mainstream. I don't doubt that Vonnegut had the best intentions - it's hard to imagine an avowed socialist deliberately signal boosting someone he knew to be a Nazi sympathizer or an anti-war advocate siding with one of the biggest warmongers in history - but that book is what popularized the wildly inflated Dresden claims and unwittingly gave neo-Nazis a stick with which to attempt to beat reality senseless for their cause, and that has to be acknowledged.

    • @gordonhuskin7337
      @gordonhuskin7337 7 дней назад +13

      @@icook1723 But surely not when it comes to the holocaust, nobody ever exaggerated that....that's for sure 🙄

    • @kevinalmgren8332
      @kevinalmgren8332 7 дней назад +10

      I love Vonnegut, but he definitely had some poor opinions that were fully rooted in a fundamental dislike of the government.
      For example, he spoke at length about how the Apollo program was a waste of time and money (it was not a waste).
      He had a legitimate reason to dislike the government and war, and he was passionate, and his passion turned into a general acceptance “everything must be rotten”

  • @Masterhistory1492
    @Masterhistory1492 9 дней назад +61

    AI use in History RUclips is also becoming far too frequent.

    • @Zarastro54
      @Zarastro54 7 дней назад +7

      Every time I see an AI thumbnail I have half a mind to downvote the video purely on that, but that would only increase the metrics. It’s such an ugly and lazy way to use visuals. Imagine having one of those jankey AI images created, looking at all the uncanny inconsistencies, and STILL deciding to use that image rather than try to edit, refine, or replace it.

    • @baddreams4368
      @baddreams4368 6 дней назад +3

      AI use is becoming too frequent…

  • @pendragon2012
    @pendragon2012 7 дней назад +17

    I knew Foote was a southern apologist. Never realized he went so off the rails or that he wasn't even a trained historian. I wonder if Ken Burns has ever regretted giving him that platform, given that Burns has been a fairly outspoken progressive voice in recent years.

    • @Tareltonlives
      @Tareltonlives 5 дней назад +2

      I think Burns has the problem of going for what makes the best story, so he kinda ignores minority voices unless forced.

    • @pendragon2012
      @pendragon2012 5 дней назад +1

      @@Tareltonlives Possibly, especially back then, but I think he's gotten a bit better. At least in the public square he's been outspoken.

    • @Tareltonlives
      @Tareltonlives 5 дней назад +4

      @@pendragon2012 Yeah, I don't blame him, I blame it on the general area of history and history media, and on media's need to reach a bigger audience. A great deal of history enthusiasts, especially that of the American civil war, are still firmly embedded in traditional white supremacy since that narrative was unchallenged for very long. So we have a show that's pretty much very 90s, very "both sides".

  • @LadyTylerBioRodriguez
    @LadyTylerBioRodriguez 9 дней назад +213

    The worst thing is how all these people still have fans. Journalist and historian Jon Wiener continues to defend Arming America to this day. Certain people in American Indian Rights groups say Churchill was correct about 9/11. David Irving released a book in the last few years and well, his ilk are getting popular lately as a result of October 7th and Tucker Carlson. Goodwin is still a talking head on CBS and CNN even if they can't call her a historian. The Trump administration quoted Shelby Foote during the George Floyd protests. Ambrose will always get fanboys due to the HBO show, and so on and so forth.
    Its frustrating that sometimes these people do get a public reckoning, then a decade later its well maybe not, or sometimes no punishment really ever comes down.

    • @goodman4966
      @goodman4966 9 дней назад

      Yeah they continue to basically failed upwards in continuing to corrupt/ misinform everyday public.

    • @theshenpartei
      @theshenpartei 9 дней назад +3

      So where does Gavin Menzies lie on this video Fraud or avoidance?

    • @texasyojimbo
      @texasyojimbo 9 дней назад +23

      @@theshenpartei OK so in order to fall on this spectrum you actually have to be a historian, not a fantasy writer.
      Did the history profession ever take Menzies seriously? I figured he was sort of in the same league as Erich von Daniken.

    • @theshenpartei
      @theshenpartei 9 дней назад +5

      ⁠@@texasyojimbono they did not

    • @theshenpartei
      @theshenpartei 9 дней назад +2

      @@texasyojimboweirdly enough my late grandfather had one of Ambrose’s books that was plagiarized it was the wild blue book. It was one of the books out of the seven that was plagiarized.

  • @SunflowerSocialist
    @SunflowerSocialist 9 дней назад +27

    The thing with Irving is that it is now generally accepted that he always had far-right and anti-semitic leanings well before the Destruction of Dresdent was published. In fact at one point he had shared a platform with British fascist leader Oswald Mosely while he was a student at University College London, during a debate on commonwealth immigration, but he was usually able to brush aside the claims that he was denying the holocaust by saying he was a military historian. I would add that he regained some credibility in 1983 with his initial intervention in the Hitler Diaries forgery (although he later backtracked, and then changed his mind again), , and as late as 1987 he was still actually getting some academic interest, even getting invited to give guest lectures at various universities (including my Alama mater), especially after the release of Churchill's war. My capstone advisor actually attended that lecture he gave at the start of the 1987-1988 school year, and recalled he was wearing an SS tie clip.
    But some (myself included) now believe that Irving was never actually trying to contribute to historical scholarship, but rather was always trying to push the envelope in terms of what he could say about Hitler and the Nazis in order to try and make more sympathetic perspectives socially acceptable, even if he got pushback in academia, in order to legitimize Fascism as an acceptable political perspective. This is also why (until 1989) he kept more open Holocaust deniers like Robert Faurisson at arms length. This is also supported by the fact that in 1982 he stepped back from publishing and tried to organize a far right party called "Focus", and had planned out a political career.

    • @DoctorX101
      @DoctorX101 9 дней назад

      Upvote.
      Irving is such a paradigm of a conman. He is a Kent Hovind, Flat Earther, Ancient Aliens, and all of that. He is just a racist, as Christopher Hitchens learned to his surprise. Hitchens was attracted to him, because Irving denigrated Churchill. Then Hitchens got to know him; Irving was rather open with his Anti-Semitism.
      Fine the old Errol Morris documentary "Mr. Death" about Fred Leucter. I will not spoil it, but Irving appears, and tries to act like he is not another racist Holocaust Denier. I believe Shermer described him as a Holocaust Denier who does not want to socially be seen as one.
      Well, he lost his lawsuit, then ended up in prison in Austria. He had a lawyer who concluded her summation with, I am not making this up, screaming "Heil Hitler!"

    • @alexanderfurrows7946
      @alexanderfurrows7946 5 дней назад

      With regard to the Hitler Diary forgery, one of my professors said that though Irving is a liar clearly trying to falsify history, it can’t be denied that in his attempt to rewrite history he developed a categorical knowledge of the Nazi Germany he was trying to rewrite.

  • @alhesiad
    @alhesiad 9 дней назад +61

    Ambrose wanted to write novelistic history with poor methodology, while Irving is openly malevolent.

    • @nigeh5326
      @nigeh5326 8 дней назад +11

      Malevolent is one word for Irving, I can think of a few more but RUclips will delete my comment 😉
      Re Ambrose I think he was writing a story with Band of Brothers designed to emphasise the heroism of Easy Company, how they were average Americans who accomplished amazing things against the odds.
      In that he succeeded but in the process he allowed his admiration for them to distort some of the real history by believing what he was told rather than what research would show to be true.

  • @emmaarmo379
    @emmaarmo379 9 дней назад +112

    I feel like part of why Shelby Foote is accepted is his voice. When you watch Ken Burns and the music is stirring while Shelby is speaking, it's hard not to get caught up in the narrative he's spinning

    • @misterjaxon2559
      @misterjaxon2559 9 дней назад +18

      I absolutely agree and thought so when it was first broadcast 30-some years ago. I recall telling a friend that I was not sure about his historical interpretations but I would love to have a few beers with him and listen to his stories.

    • @yrobtsvt
      @yrobtsvt 9 дней назад +24

      @@misterjaxon2559 this is really important to think about. He was a fantastic storyteller, a mythmaker, rather than an academic historian. His stories made the South come alive. Now, having read a lot about the war, I know similar stories can be told about the North. But where's our devoted storyteller?

    • @TylerD288
      @TylerD288 9 дней назад +14

      Yes, I've heard other people say this exact statement. I didn't know how racist he was though until I watched another interview on with him on RUclips where he goes off on African Americans, defends the Klan, and then had the audacity to use the "N" word multiple times immediately after admitting that Black Americans hate that word. I was done. I stopped watching and will never give him another second of my time.

    • @joegibbskins
      @joegibbskins 9 дней назад +8

      He’s also got a good sense for character and writes better prose than most historians. Hell, his “history” is literally called a narrative. They are enjoyable and easily readable and because they concern themselves primarily with battles and the men who fight them, can seem even handed. I really do think people who like the civil war should read Foote at some point. The problem is that Foote’s narratives are the I lt histories some people read on the Civil War, and far more people know when from the Ken Burns documentary where he is even less even handed than in he is in print

    • @joegibbskins
      @joegibbskins 9 дней назад +5

      @@TylerD288I’ve seen that interview, if it’s the one I’m thinking about, and he says those things to give an account of how Faulkner thought about race. Front what I’ve read, he’s wrong here. Why Faulkner was definitely a racist, he also struggled with that racism in his work especially after the private revelation that he himself was the product of “miscegenation”. That said, Foote did know Faulkner personally, and I do not and also he was from the Deep South, obsessed with the civil war, and born in 1916, so it’s not really surprising that his own views were shitty

  • @TheBrunohusker
    @TheBrunohusker 7 дней назад +11

    Growing up as a Ken Burns fan who sparked my historical interest, this makes me want to look into his use of pop historians and how as much as he provokes historical interest, also promotes pseudo history. I particularly get really upset with Shelby Foote as the guy was just a writer and while the documentary The Civil War
    paints him as charming and gives him legitimacy, a lot of better scholars were given less time and to me that ruins it and makes me dislike Foote a lot in addition to his lost cause defenses.

  • @arronjameshook
    @arronjameshook 9 дней назад +150

    The thing that gets me about Irving is that he’s rightly seen as disgraced whilst his claims about Dresden in ‘The Destruction of Dresden’ are still commonly heard in pop culture, though they aren’t usually attributed to Irving.

    • @LadyTylerBioRodriguez
      @LadyTylerBioRodriguez 9 дней назад +3

      Yep that's the power of cultural defusion. Even if its sept into something popular it might stick around even if it becomes debunked.
      Slaughterhouse Five said its true, therefore it is. Doesn't matter if the author later admitted its wrong and issued corrected editions, too late.
      I deal with this a lot with piracy. Some romance novel in the 1960s got quoted as a source for the pirate Anne Bonny. Many of its claims still continue to appear despite the source material being nonsense

    • @jdkessey
      @jdkessey 9 дней назад +20

      You'd be surprised by how many cultural assumptions, icons, and debates come out of bad history.

    • @Dylanhya
      @Dylanhya 9 дней назад +8

      I think piers Morgan said something about dresden recently, as an example

    • @chaost4544
      @chaost4544 9 дней назад +11

      @@jdkessey Ward Churchill is a prime example of that. Culturally, many have accepted some of his nonsense.

    • @captainhaddock6435
      @captainhaddock6435 9 дней назад +4

      Slaughterhouse 5

  • @evenodd3339
    @evenodd3339 9 дней назад +84

    Woodrow Wilson not being disgraced is crazy

    • @davidw.2791
      @davidw.2791 9 дней назад

      The president with a stroke?

    • @randomchannel-px6ho
      @randomchannel-px6ho 9 дней назад +13

      Questioning Wilson is to question the entire economic order and foreign relations of the united states. I don't think its that obscure what the problems with him are, its just something you're not going to be shouting about if you're pursuing a career in a powerful american institution

    • @nigeh5326
      @nigeh5326 8 дней назад +5

      The husband of the first female president of the USA 😉lol

    • @Ugly_German_Truths
      @Ugly_German_Truths 8 дней назад

      How about Jared Diamond? Or did that one not have a proper degree in the first place?

    • @smallpseudonym2844
      @smallpseudonym2844 7 дней назад +5

      @@A.Hutler Specious implication. This is a pointlessly fatalistic way of looking at history & politics, and is suspiciously close to the sort of cover that would-be fascists use to muddy the waters of monstrous behaviour. It also ultimately boils down to a false equivalence fallacy hidden behind argumentum ad ignorantiam.
      Shaming behaviour can easily be abused. But holding bad actors to account is critical when maintaining the integrity of a system, be that a system of government, academia, economics, justice etc.

  • @joepriority
    @joepriority 9 дней назад +35

    Im a big fan of this channel and I was not aware of the TopTenz incident. I guess the ripoff problem is all pervasive on YT.

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  9 дней назад +18

      I thought this is the first time I've called it out, but before release, I searched my previous social media posts - I had one joking Facebook post from a few weeks after the their plagiarism where I joked about it. There is still only one like on it... from my mother, LOL

    • @DiamondKingStudios
      @DiamondKingStudios 9 дней назад +2

      @@CynicalHistorianYou have a dedicated fan base; that will probably change as soon as people hear about it.
      Not from me; I don’t have Facebook and don’t plan to download it anytime soon, if ever.

    • @SEAZNDragon
      @SEAZNDragon 8 дней назад +5

      Simon has talked about using plagiarism detectors to make sure the writers are not plagiarizing, although it sounded more of a text based program. He even fired at least one writer for plagiarizing and scrapped all scripts and filmed videos of that writer's work and even deleted the videos that had been uploaded.
      That said I rewatched both videos and the only things I saw the same in both videos were the myths talking about white slaves, only the wealthy owning slaves, amount of slave deaths/slave streatment, slaves fighting for the South, and the popularity of abolishing in the North. These would be common points to bring up in any video about slavery myths, especially related to the US Civil War. The only thing in the TopTenz video that made me jump up was when it was said FDR made the final ban on chattel slavery so Japan couldn't use it as a propaganda tool. It seem the writer misunderstood FDR directing the DOJ to go shapecropper landlords a few days after Pearl Harbor as a new/final ban.

  • @Spongebrain97
    @Spongebrain97 9 дней назад +45

    Whoa good timing. The other day I finally watched the Ken Burns Civil War documentary for the first time and while doing so I looked up the commentators who appeared in it and one that stood out was Shelby Foote

    • @jerrysmooth24
      @jerrysmooth24 9 дней назад +13

      it takes shelby foote 9 minutes to say the word "tidewater" he had the most southern aristocrat voice ever

    • @Spongebrain97
      @Spongebrain97 9 дней назад +15

      ​@@jerrysmooth24 something amusing I read on his Wikipedia page is that apparently Daniel Craig based his southern accent on Shelby Foote's for the film Knives Out

    • @theshenpartei
      @theshenpartei 9 дней назад +2

      @@Spongebrain97where did you watch that documentary Amazon or Netflix?

    • @Spongebrain97
      @Spongebrain97 9 дней назад +8

      ​@theshenpartei I saw it on the Internet Archive website which had all the episodes

    • @TheMacJew
      @TheMacJew 9 дней назад +7

      If you remove Foote's opening monologue, and end the series with Dr Fields' final speech, the series still holds up.

  • @SisyphusLaughing
    @SisyphusLaughing 6 дней назад +7

    I love two things: scholarly rigor, and adorable kitties. This video provided both--kudos

  • @williebeamen2335
    @williebeamen2335 9 дней назад +16

    Came for the analysis, stayed for the outtakes

  • @Stoneworks
    @Stoneworks 9 дней назад +16

    I’ll be one of these in 20 years 😎

  • @agentb4074
    @agentb4074 9 дней назад +10

    King is so adorable. Thanks for including outtakes. My 16-year-old cat Karen recently died, and watching those King outtakes just warms my heart and makes me remember the good times. 💚
    Oh, and the rest of the video was good, too. 🙂I'm just a simple history lover as a hobby, with a particular interest in the American Civil War. So I know about Foote, and I see Goodwin pop up in plenty of interviews, but most of the others are new to me. Fascinating to hear about these cases.

  • @pabonismygod
    @pabonismygod 14 часов назад +1

    I'm a historian of anarchism and anti-fascism, and I thank the algorithm gods for finally recommending a history video that isn't right-wing propaganda or brain-dead regurgitation. Great job! Also, your cat is freaking adorable.

  • @texasyojimbo
    @texasyojimbo 9 дней назад +52

    You didn't even mention the "Mary Rosh" scandal around John Lott faking reviews of his book.
    I wrote something in a column in the college newspaper (20 years ago) that was critical of him and he made a point to reach out to me and tell me how wrong I was.

  • @MurderousEagle
    @MurderousEagle 9 дней назад +56

    The weirdest thing about Irving is how he somehow ended up making Vonnegut quote nazi propaganda. Dude hated nazis, even accidental nazis. see: Mother Night

    • @SamuelKoepke-r3o
      @SamuelKoepke-r3o 9 дней назад +1

      Figures for an American POW captured during the Battle of the Bulge, and, unlike Irving, was actually there.

    • @chrisball3778
      @chrisball3778 9 дней назад +25

      The way I've always seen it, the bombing of Dresden was the most traumatic experience of Vonnegut's life. He saw an appalling amount of death, but nobody really talked about what he'd witnessed after the war until Irving's book. From Vonnegut's perspective, he'd been forced at gunpoint to help dig hundreds of dead people out of ruined buildings. He had no idea whether those bodies were 0.1% of the total dead or 0.01%. Someone who was at least talking about lots of dead civilians seemed more plausible than all the people who'd ignored it all. He wouldn't have had any way of knowing what Irving's motivation was back then. As you say, he clearly hated fascists of all sorts. I remember hearing him on a radio program a few years before his death, absolutely slamming George W Bush and the invasion of Iraq. I don't think it's his fault he got fooled by Irving.

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 9 дней назад +11

      ​@@chrisball3778
      It didn't help that Dresden ended up on the wrong side of The Iron Curtain so that the issue got muddled by Cold War propaganda.

    • @chrisball3778
      @chrisball3778 9 дней назад +4

      @@alanpennie8013 Absolutely.

    • @WoobooRidesAgain
      @WoobooRidesAgain 7 дней назад +6

      @@alanpennie8013 And it also did not help that throughout the Cold War, historians had a bad habit of taking the claims of German war survivors and Nazi propaganda at face value as primary sources without much in the way of interrogation. This was a frequent problem in discussing the Eastern Front, where for a long time the _only_ available sources were the former German military members, but also had a habit of happening even on the Western Front and North Africa, where non-German sources were readily accessible.
      See the Battle of Villers-Bocage and the reputation of Rommel, for instance.

  • @BoringAngler
    @BoringAngler 8 дней назад +7

    A small part of the problem is the casual use of "historian" in popular or social media. If a person is very enthusiastic and seemingly knowledgeable about a topic, they can be described as a "historian" of something, particularly if there isn't obvious academic interest in the topic to contrast. Ideally, they would be described as an "amateur historian" or "enthusiast" but that's not always done.

    • @musclestruts5032
      @musclestruts5032 7 дней назад +1

      I agree with this. I'm a high school history teacher, but I'd still argue I'm still simply an amateur historian. My job first and foremost is pedagogical in nature, not academic. An actual historian would blow me out of the water, but I reckon I could manage a classroom better than the average historian.

  • @AtropalArbaal-dk8jv
    @AtropalArbaal-dk8jv 3 дня назад +2

    What's amazing, is that Doris Kearns Goodwin still gets interviewed on PBS.

  • @cgardner85
    @cgardner85 9 дней назад +13

    I had history professor once said you cannot go wrong with too many footnotes.

    • @DoctorX101
      @DoctorX101 9 дней назад +5

      I like that. I shall like to steal it.

    • @Elora445
      @Elora445 6 дней назад +2

      Better to have too many rather than too few.

  • @gustavderkits8433
    @gustavderkits8433 2 дня назад +1

    Very glad you included Shelby Foote! An entertaining writer with a good voice and no regard for truth.

  • @Enzolitique
    @Enzolitique 9 дней назад +33

    I got into civil war history via the Ken Burns documentary, and Foote was entertaining, but even without prior knowledge he seemed to really like the confederacy. So it's interesting to know about his background...

    • @Tareltonlives
      @Tareltonlives 5 дней назад

      Yeah, explains a lot about his bias and his repeating old lies

    • @Tinil0
      @Tinil0 4 дня назад

      @@thomassenbart He didn't write objective history whatsoever, he propagated the lost cause myth beyond just racist southerners. He actually promotes the nonsense and easily debunked claim that the civil war wasn't about slavery and that the Union was somehow the aggressor.

    • @Tinil0
      @Tinil0 4 дня назад

      @@thomassenbart The Lost Cause myth has nothing to do with how people felt at the time, it's a creation from the post-reconstruction period that made up lies about the goals of the Confederacy and how they acted in the war.
      You find him well spoken because he is, he is a great storyteller. But you find him "credible and a master in the subject matter" because you are ignorant about the actual history and are substituting a good story for truth. Something sounding plausible and good doesn't make it accurate. He didn't give an objective telling from the southern perspective is the entire point.
      No one said that this was an issue of good vs evil. You are making up a strawman for someone who is trying to educate you so you can pretend to be the bigger person. This isn't an issue of opinion or of demonization, this is an issue of lies.

    • @ThommyofThenn
      @ThommyofThenn 3 дня назад

      ​@@Tinil0this was something of a shock as I've seen all of Burn's documentaries and learned a lot from them. Even without taking his word at face value, his docs have led me to research events for myself. I'm wondering if Burns lost some reputation after the Foote revisionism became known

    • @Tinil0
      @Tinil0 3 дня назад

      @@ThommyofThenn Eh, yes but Ken Burns isn't a historian, he is a documentary film maker. He isn't held to the same standards as historians and all his documentaries is not proper history, but rather pop history. His goal is to tell an entertaining narrative, not to present a history paper. So to some extent he gets off scott free, he just isn't being judged by the same standards as Foote. But by the same note, if your only education on a subject is a Ken Burns documentary then you do not know that subject at all.
      But yeah, his deferrence to Foote is part of why his work isn't considered serious history. It shows how his focus IS entertainment, not history.

  • @lyonellaverde3135
    @lyonellaverde3135 4 дня назад +2

    It sounds like some of these "disgraced historians" are great fiction writers. Just not historians.

  • @ChapterGrim
    @ChapterGrim 9 дней назад +12

    Plagiarism is a tricky issue, especially outside of specific subjects. On YT it annoys me, but without training it's easy to accidentally fall into it by accident, that training needs to happen fairly early in education and be robust enough to be effective... 🤔

  • @universome511
    @universome511 7 дней назад +65

    The easy way to avoid becoming disgraced as an historian is to always agree with those in power

    • @keiranbradley3238
      @keiranbradley3238 7 дней назад +6

      To be a weaver of party mythology is a guarantee of wealth and influence.

    • @keiranbradley3238
      @keiranbradley3238 7 дней назад +5

      Man you should've seen them kicking Mr Ezra Pound!.

    • @billmozart7288
      @billmozart7288 6 дней назад +2

      That approach has diminishing returns

    • @universome511
      @universome511 5 дней назад +2

      @@billmozart7288 As it should

    • @uniformmike05
      @uniformmike05 5 дней назад +4

      @universome511 Nonsense. The easy way to avoid becoming disgraced is to use proper scientific methodology and avoid committing scientific fraud, not using credible sources, misquoting sources, or letting your biases take over.

  • @danielwall7281
    @danielwall7281 8 дней назад +6

    One thing I often think about is the process of debunking this kind of work. It seems that it often takes awhile for serious scholarship to catch up with people like this,

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  8 дней назад +1

      Very true. That's the asymmetry principle at work

  • @NicholasOfAutrecourt
    @NicholasOfAutrecourt 6 дней назад +4

    Bellesiles's name is misspelled in the video title. It's Bellesiles, not Belliselles. Also, the pronunciation of his name is more like bell-EEL.

  • @nopenopenopenope194
    @nopenopenopenope194 6 дней назад +7

    I remember slogging through all 3 Shelby Foot Civil War books and being dumbfounded that the CSA lost the war. Just about anything good that the Union did was either left out, attributed to accident, or minimized such that I didn't realize that they won any battles. It was really weird.

  • @OleJoe
    @OleJoe День назад +1

    The problem with tyrants is kind of like the Season one of "The Sopranos." Tony drops his daughter off at a college for an admissions interview, then goes and kills a guy who "ratted" on his criminal organization. He then returns and picks up his daughter like nothing had happened, a kind loving father. There are films of Hitler with his neighbors kids. There is film of him playing fetch with his dog. Film of him cracking jokes with his friends, giving gifts to his employees. relaxing with his girl friend, etc. Who knows, he might have personally been a nice guy, YET, he and his accomplices were responsible for WWII and the deaths of millions of people, including the Six Million Jews. Personally, I think it's a lot more Jews, but Six Million seems to be the amount generally agreed upon.

    • @pabonismygod
      @pabonismygod 14 часов назад

      Yup. And the six million figure doesn't generally include others purged by the Reich, like those from the LGTQB groups, the infirm, those deemed "mentally defected" and other "undesirables". It's maddening to see that denialism is still a thing.

  • @hollyswoods
    @hollyswoods 9 дней назад +6

    Immediately clicked solely due to Foote as I used to watch the Ken Burns Civil War doc in history (civil war) class

  • @Tareltonlives
    @Tareltonlives 6 дней назад +3

    How long have economists pretended to be sociologists, historians, biologists, political scientists, etc?

    • @FabricofTime
      @FabricofTime 5 дней назад +2

      Probably about as long as engineers have been pretending to be physicists, biologists, and geologists.

    • @Tareltonlives
      @Tareltonlives 5 дней назад +1

      @@FabricofTime Yeah, but at least engineers will have to STUDY those. I mean, look at Bill Nye, he actually understands scientific principles. What's surprising is when engineers are so ignorance of science, and there's a disturbing amount of them

    • @boobah5643
      @boobah5643 5 дней назад

      Economists _are_ all those things. There are no hard walls between the social 'sciences;' they all blend. The difference is more the approach/methodology than the topic, even if specific topics gave rise to those methodologies.

    • @wankertanker1813
      @wankertanker1813 4 дня назад

      As we know economics isn't a science.

  • @seanbeadles7421
    @seanbeadles7421 9 дней назад +8

    I am very surprised this definition of conspiracy theory was so old. I always assumed it came from the JFK assassination where if you thought Oswald was working with someone else (a conspirator) you were a conspiracy theorist and then it went from there. That’s really cool to see it’s from the early 20th century

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  9 дней назад +8

      The first time the phrase was used was in 1863 about the Civil War, but it didn't have a negative connotation, but the history profession didn't exist in the United States. From its usage in 1909, it's clear that historians were using it derogatorily for awhile before that. I think the popularization of the term outside of scholarship came with _The Paranoid Style_ in 1964, but charting popular usage is neigh impossible

    • @seanbeadles7421
      @seanbeadles7421 9 дней назад +3

      @@CynicalHistorian thanks for the detailed reply Cypher!

  • @garrettmetting6938
    @garrettmetting6938 9 дней назад +8

    Is Philip S. Foner related to Eric Foner?

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  9 дней назад +8

      Yep. They're a whole family of historians

    • @garrettmetting6938
      @garrettmetting6938 9 дней назад +1

      @@CynicalHistorian huh. So a disgraced historian is related to one of the best reconstruction historians (imo)

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  9 дней назад +2

      @@garrettmetting6938 the point there was that Philip S Foner wasn't disgraced though. He was a plagiarist though and I'd guess he'd be disgraced today with the current media environment

  • @retriever19golden55
    @retriever19golden55 6 дней назад +2

    Recently, someone posted on a Shelby Foote Facebook fan page words to the effect that as much as he enjoys Foote's work, Foote was not really an historian. One commenter in particular was furious and attacked the poster (with words, of course!). That response really took me aback. Foote, as you noted here, is an engaging speaker and storyteller, but not an actual historian. I think his work is important for its perspective and context from the Lost Cause aspect, and relevant due to the large number of fourth- or fifth-generation Lost Causers that exist, but we shouldn't refer to Foote as a historian. Burns identified him in the documentary as "Writer," and that's what he was.

  • @bamboosho0t
    @bamboosho0t 9 дней назад +5

    This is weird. I wondered why I didn't get a notification, and apparently I'm not subscribed... although I was! 🤨 So, people need to watch out, YT might be "un-subscribing" people without their knowledge. #subscribed👍🏻

  • @jeanmp2
    @jeanmp2 19 часов назад

    "Those who deny atrocities privately wish it would happen again..."--Bravo for calling that.

  • @kwi5331
    @kwi5331 7 дней назад +3

    Why am I not surprised Peter Theil slimed his way into this story.

  • @nethmes1
    @nethmes1 9 дней назад +5

    Oh man what a bummer. I thought the Ward Churchill think was a case of things being blown out of proportion with the way that conservatives in the 00's used him as part of the culture war agenda to discredit academics, but I didnt know he was such a crank as well. The Stephen Ambrose news is disappointing too, I remember reading Band of Brothers in my teenage years and it lead to a lifelong fascination with the second world war. It's crazy how you can be introduced to a topic with flawed information, yet end up becoming learned by expanding out onto other works.

  • @donny_doyle
    @donny_doyle 9 дней назад +3

    Didn't realize the volume was up on my phone- that friendly intro scared the beegeezus outta me. Well done...

  • @andywomack3414
    @andywomack3414 7 дней назад +13

    Can writing history be anything other than a political act?

  • @TylerD288
    @TylerD288 9 дней назад +20

    There is (was?) an interview with Shelby Foote on RUclips where he complains about African Americans and even calls them the "N" word, and to an African American interviewer no less. I was done right there.

  • @tomflavin7139
    @tomflavin7139 9 дней назад +1

    Absolutely love this video - I love that he breaks this into the type of disgrace along with possible explanations of how and why then tries to show examples from across the culture war spectrum. I’m sad to see that Ambrose and Doris Kearns Goodwin ended up on this list bc I do love their writing, but at least it seems the historical information they published wasn’t sullied. I hope the people they plaguerized were given their proper due after the lawsuits

  • @stephicohu
    @stephicohu 9 дней назад +3

    Great video, you should make a part 2 for other historians. I didn’t know that Goodwin had problems with some of her books.

  • @welcometonebalia
    @welcometonebalia 3 дня назад +2

    Thank you.
    (I didn't expect so many comments labelling you as a dangerous communist, I'm very naive.)

  • @CosmoShidan
    @CosmoShidan 9 дней назад +3

    Good gracious, a history video with philosophy references! And Popper makes it an added bonus! Great stuff Cyph!

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  8 дней назад +4

      At some point, I really ought to do an episode on the scholarship surrounding conspiracism, but I'd need to come up with a good enough framing device to get people to click on it

    • @CosmoShidan
      @CosmoShidan 8 дней назад +3

      @@CynicalHistorian I have to wonder if the methodology of Imre Lakatos' Research Programme could work in a framework of distinguishing a problem shift of conspiracism and historicism. What I mean by that is, I ponder how one can make the distinction between history and pseudo-history, in the same way Lakatos distinguishes the difference between science and non-science.

  • @mattgoettl6796
    @mattgoettl6796 9 дней назад +6

    I love this channel. The content is always great, and I can count on cat content at the end of every episode. 10/10 quality

  • @LillyP-xs5qe
    @LillyP-xs5qe 9 дней назад +4

    The first disgraced historian in the USA might have been Woodrow Wilson

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  8 дней назад +6

      Sadly never disgraced

    • @LillyP-xs5qe
      @LillyP-xs5qe 8 дней назад +4

      @@CynicalHistorian he is in the eyes of us and definitely in yours, and that means a lot!

    • @hattruck8607
      @hattruck8607 8 дней назад

      Did Wilson,for his many flaws,ever actually violate the standards of Historical work,or was he just,like every white academic until C.Vann Woodward, naive about black history?

    • @alihenderson5910
      @alihenderson5910 7 дней назад

      He set the course for the present day, in 1913.

  • @jcwoodman5285
    @jcwoodman5285 9 дней назад +37

    Ambrose definitely did a poor turn with his book Band of Brothers. Those misleading, misrepresented & outright changed or eliminated points of fact in several of persons facts REALLY led to major untruths in The tv series...

    • @bradhorowitz2765
      @bradhorowitz2765 9 дней назад +10

      I also find it hilarious that he among so many advisors for Private Ryan never critiqued the actual story. Like “Spielberg, this plot didnt make sense. No squadron of troops would go into German territory WITH NO Support, One translator who ISNT trained for combat, to find one guy. Like that isn’t an actual order. Why are you having bullets go through water? Why is this framing the fictional soldiers as the greatest generation? That’s a frankly self-gratifying view of the 40s. Also, why are you making the translator this strawman wimp?”

    • @ickyelf4549
      @ickyelf4549 9 дней назад +1

      @@bradhorowitz2765 did you type that with your butt?

    • @MrChickennugget360
      @MrChickennugget360 9 дней назад +1

      @@bradhorowitz2765 the reason is that WW2 generation was growing old. And that in the 60s the boomers were feeling guilty about how rebellious they were. So, the idealized the WW2 generation.

    • @bradhorowitz2765
      @bradhorowitz2765 9 дней назад

      @@MrChickennugget360 uhh..maybe? or its the emerging conservative movement? or more mof nsotalgia? afterall, on paper ww2 was the clearest good vs evil battle-unlike the vietnam war. except the greatest generation came home to lynch nonwhite veterans and make deicison sthat led to the vietnam war among other issues. its also worth nothing that america, as most other nations, did not care about the holocaust at all to get involve earlier. kinda makes the whole "greatest generation" myth hard to accept.

    • @SEAZNDragon
      @SEAZNDragon 8 дней назад +1

      @@MrChickennugget360 Some of Easy Company were still around and wrote their own books though. However I always had an issue with Albert Blithe's story given the man survived the war and served a full career career in the Army before dying of an ulcer while on active duty in the 1960s. That was one heck of an oversight although if I remember correctly the explanation for the oversight was Ambrose took some vets' word Blithe died in WWII and didn't check (even then not a great explanation).

  • @jayfrank1913
    @jayfrank1913 9 дней назад +16

    The Culture Wars existed long before the 1980s. There were culture wars from the beginning of the 20th Century and before. Examples: anti-Asian immigration (1900), the revival of the Klan (1900-1930s), The Red Summer & Prohibition of 1919, the end of the Suffrage Movement in 1020, pre-WWII isolationism (1930s), the conservative swing of the 1950s. Red Scare part II (1950s-early 1960s), The anti-Vietnam War protests and feminists and civil rights movements amd hippies vs.hardhats (1950s-1970s). I've left many out, of course. and I don't even want to get into the 1800s.
    This is not a criticism. I'm just reacting to how I felt when you said the "Culture Wars that started in the '80s" and remembered my pre-80s life and what I learned of the 50 years before I was born. My Mom's in the next room, and she can remember everything from the middle of WWII on.

    • @musclestruts5032
      @musclestruts5032 7 дней назад

      I think the foundations of the modern day culture war were laid out in the 1960s. The root of many right-winger's grievances lie with things like Brown v Board of Education or the Civil Rights Act. The capitalist class meanwhile has been fighting their own war since the New Deal.

    • @MichaelKrinsky-hx1vu
      @MichaelKrinsky-hx1vu 7 дней назад +3

      To be fair, saying "the culture wars that began in the 80s" could simply be a way of separating them from the culture wars of earlier times.

    • @jayfrank1913
      @jayfrank1913 6 дней назад +3

      @@MichaelKrinsky-hx1vu Yes, the 80's did bring Protestant Evangelism into US politics, something that still exists today.

  • @coastdownhills
    @coastdownhills 8 дней назад +12

    Darn! I'm no historian other than being 77 yo and have lived though a lot. You threw shade on some of my most esteemed authors. Good on you. I needed a jolt of reality.

    • @warheadsnation
      @warheadsnation 7 дней назад +1

      @@A.Hutler You could have done a better job hiding your name, Adolf.

    • @Aster_Risk
      @Aster_Risk 2 дня назад

      Good on you for listening and taking it in. That's awesome to see!

  • @craigkdillon
    @craigkdillon Час назад

    I am impressed that you have Will & Ariel Durant's History of Civilization books on the shelf behind you.
    IMO, they are the absolute best books to start learning history.
    They give a good grounding of looking at history through different lenses --
    events, people, technology, culture, economics, and religion.
    After reading them, one can study history in any area, and keep things in context.

  • @adamzajac9872
    @adamzajac9872 7 дней назад +4

    Genuine question, by including Shelby Foote on this list, does that (by transitive property) mean that Ken Burns is or should be a discredited historian? Full disclosure, I love Burns' documentaries but, as I generally agree with Cynical Historian's premise here, I have a hard time squaring the two matters

    • @Tareltonlives
      @Tareltonlives 5 дней назад

      I would argue that Burns does have bias. The West and Bison for example only pass a little bit of time on Native americans before placing white Americans front and center. Mexico and African Americans in the west are minimized.

  • @jameshannagan4256
    @jameshannagan4256 7 дней назад +1

    It took me a long time to find your channel but i'm glad I finally did. It's a shame that people are using your material without even giving you credit but I hope you realize that there are people who admire what you do.

  • @aplatin3094
    @aplatin3094 9 дней назад +20

    I was in Stephan Thernstrom's class where he made the remarks that more working Black women were heads of households compared to white women because they wanted to avoid marriage to Black men. It was offensive and a Black female student actually brought it up in class. To his credit, he apologized at the next class and it soon stopped becoming an issue (certainly there was no impact on his career). It is a perfect example of the grifting you highlighted - there was no lasting harm yet he made a career out of being a victim of this incident. I find it ironic that some of these academics love to portray themselves as victims while at the same time criticizing the supposed "victimhood mentality" of minorities and women.

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  9 дней назад +7

      I read two books that talked about him and both avoided specifying what he actually said. This is fascinating. If he had just said that it was a non-issue and continued on with his day, then the only ones grifting would have been the _Harvard Crimson._ Thanks for saying so

    • @aplatin3094
      @aplatin3094 8 дней назад +3

      @@CynicalHistorian It did not help that he was a poor lecturer with zero charisma (I mean, he managed to make 20th century American history boring, quite an accomplishment). When I heard the comment, I initially thought it was a lame attempt at a joke about successful women not wanting loser husbands (which might have worked if he were talking about white women). To make things worse, he shared the class with the very entertaining Bernard Bailyn (who taught the first half), the star of the history department at the time. I like your work and joined your Patreon.

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  8 дней назад +1

      Thank you. Gotta admit, I'm still figuring out how to do entertaining lectures too. A good quarter of my student evaluations are basically saying that I seemed too nervous - which fair, I'm still getting my sea-legs. It's a surprisingly difficult skill to get up in front of a hundred or so students and keep the story strait and well put together. This is my seventh semester as instructor of record, yet I'm still not adept at this. Hopefully none of my jokes fall as flat as Thernstrom's did 😅

    • @stevensica5918
      @stevensica5918 7 дней назад

      Well, did anyone ask for the sources upon which he based that statement? Did he put forward those sources in his defense?

    • @aplatin3094
      @aplatin3094 7 дней назад

      @@stevensica5918 He did not defend the statement nor provide any sources, but I do not think he intended to make a statement of historical fact. It really did sound like an off the cuff remark. Most of the lecture was a comparison of incomes between Blacks and Whites for which he did provide statistics. His reaction to the criticism, however, was over the top. Google his letter to the Crimson where he goes on about witch hunts and McCarthyism. You would think people were calling for his removal.

  • @matthintz9468
    @matthintz9468 4 дня назад

    I haven't watched yet, but you had me when I saw Hoffer's Past Imperfect in your bibliography. I look forward to getting to this!

  • @michaelmilitello5644
    @michaelmilitello5644 9 дней назад +8

    Question. Does academia lean predominantly left?

    • @Hollows1997
      @Hollows1997 9 дней назад +11

      Lean left? If academia was any more left it would be anti clockwise!

    • @ryri51
      @ryri51 9 дней назад +11

      Yes because as my conservative political science professor once said, the facts themselves lean left.

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  9 дней назад +21

      You'll find that political tendencies highly depend on specialization. Liberal arts, yeah definitely leans left, but there's plenty of exceptions - for instance, the most prominent member of my history department is a Trump supporter, though he'll go emeritus next year. Business and sports on the other hand; quite the opposite. Sciences, medicine, and practicums; all over the place. Beyond faculty, there's also staff, which that typically reflects the local population. So it's certainly not like Fox News or other conservative bastions would have you believe

    • @AlexKS1992
      @AlexKS1992 9 дней назад +5

      Yes they are and painfully so, I like history and have a thing for things like war and military history, archeology, Paleontology and a few others but the blatant display of liberal values makes me nauseous.

    • @ryri51
      @ryri51 9 дней назад

      @@AlexKS1992 lmao conservatism is an ideology based on ignorance and pre enlightenment values which directly go against the very concept of higher education and objective research into the past.

  • @worldofdoom995
    @worldofdoom995 4 дня назад +1

    Just a small clarification. Simon Whistler doesn't write those videos. He is a host/narrator for hire.

    • @jamesbest9038
      @jamesbest9038 4 дня назад

      Sort of the reverse actually. He just reads the scripts and hires writers to write them for him. That's actually why I like his videos where he's reading them cold and giving his unvarnished response better.

  • @TheMacJew
    @TheMacJew 9 дней назад +21

    Shelby Foote? Man, let me go get my popcorn!

  • @nanasewdear
    @nanasewdear 5 дней назад +1

    When you have the endorsement of Dinesh D'Souza you can rest assured that your reputation as a historian is in tatters.

  • @charlesb-b993
    @charlesb-b993 9 дней назад +31

    i went to the same school as david irving (many many decades apart) and i as a student of history who also has jewish ancestors always felt his hateful rhetoric hanging over our own study of the holocaust in my final years there. we actually analysed some of his writing and looked at the flaws of his logic.
    massively prefer claiming douglas adams, who also went to my school!

  • @frankpalancio8471
    @frankpalancio8471 2 часа назад

    Scary thing is that everyone thought Shelby Foote was awesome when Burns' show was aired. I always thought he was a confederate apologist

  • @ross825
    @ross825 9 дней назад +15

    Honorable mention, Robert Service, and his Russian to English "translations" and circular references.

    • @onbearfeet
      @onbearfeet 9 дней назад +3

      For a moment, I thought this comment was about the poet, and I got very sad because I enjoyed his poems as a kid. Then I hit Wikipedia.
      Uh ... wow, that other guy is less than great.

    • @fidomusic
      @fidomusic 7 дней назад +3

      I haven't read it but Service's biography of Trotsky has been widely criticized by historians.

  • @craigkdillon
    @craigkdillon Час назад

    I want your opinion of Allan Eckert's series of books - The Winning of America series, which has the books ---
    The Conquerors, Wilderness Empire, The Frontiersmen, and The Wilderness War.
    The book, Twilight of Empire has 54 pages of notes and an eight page bibliography.
    Technically, they are historical novels.
    BUT - Allan Eckert explains that every event occurred or must have occurred.
    As such, as novels, they suffer a bit.
    As a lover of history, knowing that every event was "true" made it great.
    Now some events may not be "true" from an historian's perspective.
    Such as the events of Simon Butler's life where much of it came from Simon Butler, himself.
    Could there have been SOME exaggeration??
    Probably. I accepted that and enjoyed them.
    Other things were more important from the stand point of history.
    For me, I came away with a deeper understanding of the interactions and conflicts between the settlers and the Indians, and even between the Indian peoples.
    BTW - I use the term "Indian" for that was the proper term used for 400 years, until the current era of political correctness - of Native American, which is also an alien designation as far as the Indians are concerned.
    Anyway, I would like your opinion about his type of work. If you read one of his books, I recommend Wilderness War, it is the first, and is probably the best, IMO.

  • @ramonalejandrosuare
    @ramonalejandrosuare 6 дней назад +12

    If you defend Foote, you defend Lost Cause Propaganda. Period. Its amazing to me there are people here who defend him.

  • @markdimeo7060
    @markdimeo7060 7 дней назад +2

    Belliselles's dog ate his homework.

  • @pliant75
    @pliant75 7 дней назад +5

    Hello, I’m also a historian. Thank you for a well done video. I read your Twitter feed and I don’t know how you deal with tankies and the dregs of humanity on the regular. My hat is off to you and you also have my deepest sympathies.

    • @pliant75
      @pliant75 5 дней назад

      @@martinbaumgardner4432 Kids that blindly and feverishly shill for communism.

  • @bekkatheman
    @bekkatheman 9 дней назад +2

    I went to CSI, and am a graduate of CUNY. I am so disappointed in the system.

  • @hattielankford4775
    @hattielankford4775 7 дней назад +3

    😂 So many trolls. He must be doing something right.

  • @davidanthony4845
    @davidanthony4845 6 дней назад +2

    Re Foote ; a prime, but by no means rare, example of his tilt is the sneering, degrading treatment of Col. Shaw and the 54th Massachusetts.

  • @bluespaceman7937
    @bluespaceman7937 9 дней назад +8

    I'll be honest, despite having a history degree (not a graduate one though), I never found any viable way to get an entry level job as a historian, which is why I'm working in a completely unrelated field these days. Just a note that came to mind after the beginning of the video.

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  9 дней назад +12

      It's getting more and more difficult to find a job. I'm working as an adjunct, basically an emergency hire to fill in gaps. Trust me, I know the feeling, as I'm looking at teaching high school because it's more stable and profitable. That's what happens when people don't retire and even if they do, their positions are often replaced with adjuncts. And that has a knock on effect for everywhere in the history profession, not just academia. Liberal arts as a whole have been downsized so badly that an entry level museum job is often just above the poverty line

    • @robynbieber6312
      @robynbieber6312 5 дней назад

      I’m finishing up my masters in history and I’ve decided to pursue archeology. There are so my jobs in CRM. Look for jobs as a historian in CRM.

  • @jameshannagan4256
    @jameshannagan4256 7 дней назад +1

    Both my cats are sitting on my keyboard as i'm trying to type this.

  • @The_Horse-leafs_Cabbage
    @The_Horse-leafs_Cabbage 9 дней назад +10

    The Narcissist's Prayer--I'll save that to my notes, as that's one of the best descriptions I've seen for a bigot's mindset.

  • @joeyj6808
    @joeyj6808 2 дня назад

    The only wartime personality more grievously overhyped than MacArthur has to be Churchill.

  • @angelogarcia2189
    @angelogarcia2189 9 дней назад +11

    Shelby Foote is a novelist. Aside from having a pleasant voice, idk why anyone took him seriously as a historian.

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  9 дней назад +14

      Some novelists make for great historians. I can think of a few local ones here in New Mexico alone. But Foote never engaged with the historiography, which already makes his work next to useless, whereas those authors all have tried their best to follow the historical method

    • @angelogarcia2189
      @angelogarcia2189 9 дней назад +3

      @@CynicalHistorian R.L. Willson was a gun expert who got disgraced. You might find his case interesting.

  • @MultiStats
    @MultiStats 5 дней назад +1

    I didn't know anything about Stephen Ambrose prior to this, but that looked like a lot books that he wrote. He did a lot, and that should be a sign of something amiss. I wrote history papers in college for assignments, and being a perfectionist and detail-obsessed, found these were very time-consuming. These were just undergraduate papers. An entire book on a historical event would take a long time, years. That long list of books is a sign of shortcuts being made or relying on the work of others. He was not above making things up, which is unforgiveable for a historian. I looked into his output. He wrote 25+ books, co-wrote 5 others, and was an editor for 5 more. It would be hard to do that much meticulous historical research in one lifetime. Thanks for dealing with Ward Churchill--what a fake. David Irving sounds like a real SOB. This was an education--thank you!

    • @boobah5643
      @boobah5643 5 дней назад

      Re: Ambrose's productivity. AS the video says, he never claimed to be researching these things all by his lonesome; he had a whole pile of people doing most of the scutwork for him.
      Ostensibly, at least.

  • @tomhalla426
    @tomhalla426 9 дней назад +12

    One really should consider the racism inherent in the American gun control movement. In Chicago v McDonald, there is a short history of the movement, which started as an effort to disarm free Blacks. With The Sullivan Act, overturned in NYSRPA v Bruen, the New York legislature decided they did not care for Italians, either.

  • @colinmiddleton9444
    @colinmiddleton9444 9 дней назад +1

    I think that your RUclips video is really good and informative. It would be great to see more high content like this on RUclips.

  • @Texian_1836
    @Texian_1836 9 дней назад +22

    I'm sorry, but I love Shelby Foote's voice. That old, deep South voice is calming to me.

    • @texasyojimbo
      @texasyojimbo 9 дней назад +9

      Ah yes, the "crazy uncle" whose stories are like a heavy flannel blanket on a cold day. Sitting around a fire, drinking hot apple cider, listening to Shelby prattle on about kindly Marse Robert...

    • @blackpowder4016
      @blackpowder4016 День назад

      That fine as long as you keep in mind he was a fiction writer, not a historian.

  • @goodman4966
    @goodman4966 9 дней назад +1

    Great video now I'm curious to see him more international version of this with many different well known historians.

  • @otisdylan9532
    @otisdylan9532 9 дней назад +12

    Regarding the idea that anytime sources aren't cited, it's plagiarism, isn't it the case that school textbooks usually don't cite their sources? At any rate, I never noticed citations in any of my school history textbooks before I was in college.

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  9 дней назад +11

      That's why I said, "likely" rather than "definitely." But also, textbooks tend to have accompanying material that lists their sources. For instance, this semester I'm teaching a _religion in American history_ course, and the narrative textbook I'm using has what's called a "desk copy" with full footnotes and an extra 40 pages of bibliography in fine print. The primary source textbook I'm using doesn't need that, since the sources are right there

    • @otisdylan9532
      @otisdylan9532 9 дней назад +2

      @@CynicalHistorian OK, thanks!

    • @DiamondKingStudios
      @DiamondKingStudios 9 дней назад +2

      My APUSH textbook put its references off to one page maybe every unit or chapter.

  • @mateusz73
    @mateusz73 9 дней назад +1

    History youtubers being plagiarists is so infuriating, there was something one person said in a video and I tried reaching out to them in multiple ways, even gave them $1 on patreon to message them for a source and I got pretty much no response

  • @nomar5spaulding
    @nomar5spaulding 9 дней назад +11

    Wait a second...Drachinifel was talking about Broome winning the biggest libel case in UK history (at the time and for many years after) in his video yesterday about Convoy PQ-17. Crazy.

    • @MrChickennugget360
      @MrChickennugget360 9 дней назад +2

      funny i heard CH mention a "naval battle" and i thought... i wonder if he was talking about PQ-17 "Convey To Scatter"

    • @Zarastro54
      @Zarastro54 7 дней назад +1

      Probably the biggest British legal own goal since poor Oscar Wilde (but infinitely more deserved than he was).

  • @jayfrank1913
    @jayfrank1913 9 дней назад +2

    You pronounced "paucity" kind of oddly for a a Professor of History with a PhD, but I've been a fan of your channel for close to a decade. You are not afraid to go against some sacred cows like D.K.Goodwin,
    Signed.
    -An amateur history buff with 2 credits shy of an Associates Degree in General Studies
    and 60 years of casual book larnin'

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  9 дней назад +1

      That's not even the worst mispronunciation in this video, though i dunno what I did wrong there, LOL
      And thanks. Glad you're still here

  • @AirbornChaos
    @AirbornChaos 9 дней назад +7

    "The best and most popular historian in the US." about a dude I've never heard of,(and that's actually saying something) from a dude who might as well wear an SS uniform, "on air."

  • @mr51406
    @mr51406 7 дней назад

    Thanks for sticking by RUclips, despite its problems.
    You are needed. This video is a must-see analysis, a manifesto.
    Keep them coming and don’t be shy to be as academic as you want, those videos will last longer.
    (And I’m jealous because I should have picked history instead of geography all those eons ago… I might actually have been a real professor!)

  • @SawedOffClown
    @SawedOffClown 9 дней назад +3

    Video is great so far, though I think holyoke is pronounced “Hoe-lee-oak” if it’s in regard to the one in Massachusetts. Minor nit pick, my wife used to bother me about it

  • @groovinhooves
    @groovinhooves 7 дней назад +1

    David Irving is an example of what I term the marginalization paradox, the definition of which should be self evident, I hope.

  • @hunter_lite
    @hunter_lite 9 дней назад +3

    RUclips has become a Ripley's Believe It or Not.

  • @cavecookie1
    @cavecookie1 7 дней назад

    Great job, couldn't believe it was 42 minutes long... seemed like only 15! I agree 100% on the footnotes. Before I started the video, I checked out the description, and the first thing I saw was footnotes. I knew this would be legitimate and credible! People today are too willing to accept claims without citation, a sad fact of our modern world.

  • @pmcmanus420
    @pmcmanus420 9 дней назад +6

    Good video. The Doris Kearns Goodwin's controversy breaks my heart... but I still love her. 😢

    • @bradhorowitz2765
      @bradhorowitz2765 8 дней назад

      Why? She is..well a fraud and clearly didn’t care that much about being accurate. Plus, her narrative is..oddly conservative. She never has fully analyzed her former boss’s role in the Vietnam war, her work on the Roosevelts is not truly a critical analysis of Franklin or Eleanor. She never covers the less than savory moments the duo had, like the time Franklin killed an anti lynching bill, the refusal to let Jews in, the time he hired a crackpot economist, or even the allegations that Eleanor had female romantic relationships. In fact ken burns, the man she worked on the roosevelts came firmly against this idea…except when you watch the documentary, much like any of burns’ works, that focus on that specific group ISNT present. In fact many historians would at least argue that there is some evidence that Eleanor may have been attracted to women, or at the very least was empathetic. This actually falls in line with previous wealthy, active female empowerment movements/institutions where a good number of women were lgbt. Goodwin endorsed the myth of the Roosevelts; they were true liberals who were in the right side of history, ignoring the issues they created.