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Plagiarism and The Culture War : The Writings of Martin Luther King, Jr, and Other Prominent Americans
 
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Plagiarism and The Culture War : The Writings of Martin Luther King, Jr, and Other Prominent Americans (Paperback)

by Theodore Pappas (Author), Theordore Pappas (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

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"This is a principled polemic as provocative as it gets.: -- Ray Olson in BOOKLIST (American Library Assn.) -- -John Lukacs

Product Details

  • Paperback: 212 pages
  • Publisher: Hallberg Pub Corp; Rev Exp Su edition (March 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0873190459
  • ISBN-13: 978-0873190459
  • Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 5.7 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,182,365 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)


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Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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90 of 93 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Copy Cats, May 25, 2000
For the past eight years, intellectual sleuth Theodore Pappas, the former managing editor of Chronicles magazine, has hunted down prominent incidents of plagiarism, most notably those involving the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. His book operates on four levels: as a scholarly investigation into whether King plagiarized his 1955 Boston University doctoral dissertation; as an inquiry into the conduct of the guardians of the King legacy (Stanford University historian Clayborne Carson, the King family, et al.); as a study of the academic-publishing-media image complex that connived with the guardians to cover up the scandal; and as a brief history of plagiarism, from its 18th-century origins to its present status in an academic world lacking intellectual integrity.

Pappas emphasizes that Martin King, as the younger King was known, was a great and courageous, though flawed human being. However, in recent years an idolatrous movement has developed that has implicitly removed King from the ranks of the human.

Pappas shows that King's compulsive coveting of other men's words went back at least to his undergraduate days at Atlanta's Morehouse College, and continued at Crozer Theological Seminary and Boston University. "King's plagiarisms grow more sweeping with each year he progresses in higher education." Ultimately, King stole the most dramatic passages of his speech, "I Have a Dream," from an address by the Rev. Archibald Carey at the 1952 Republican Convention.

Pappas prints extensive parallel excerpts from King's student papers at Morehouse, on through his Boston University doctoral dissertation, and their sources. BU officials eventually admitted that King had pilfered one-third of his dissertation from Jack Stewart Boozer's 1952 Boston University dissertation. (Evidently, 1952 was a very good year!) But first the predominantly white, politically diverse Friends of Martin went on the offensive: They lied, denied, and sought to silence the whistleblowers.

From 1987-90, Clayborne Carson, director of the King Papers Project, deliberately misled journalists. And instead of simply comparing the dissertations in his own school's library, Boston University President Jon Westling unquestioningly accepted Carson's claims, insisting in 1990 that "not a single instance of plagiarism of any sort has been identified."

Mainstream media outlets, including The New York Times, New Republic, Washington Post, and Atlanta Journal/Constitution, sat on the story for a year, and only ran it after a mealy-mouthed report appeared in The Wall Street Journal, one year after the British Sunday Telegraph had told the entire story.

And then there is Keith Miller. A white composition instructor at Arizone State University, Miller espouses a theory of "voice merging," which holds that blacks cannot commit plagiarism, because the black oral tradition does not recognize intellectual property rights, and that King merely took the words of white men in order to make himself intelligible and acceptable to white audiences.

As Pappas points out, MLK believed in intellectual proerty rights; he had taken a course at BU devoted to plagiarism and scholarly standards; he copyrighted his plagiarized speeches; and Miller provides no evidence that King saw himself as part of the "tradition" that Miller has posited. There is no "voice merging" tradition; Keith Miller made it up, with its attendant revision of black American (and thus American) history, with the sole and explicit purpose of rescuing King's scholarly reputation.

Pappas suggests that the young King escaped apprehension due either to an early form of affirmative action or his professors' laziness and incompetence. And that was back in the good old days. As Thomas Sowell recently noted, the title "full professor" may need to be replaced with "empty professor."

After spending my first year teaching college buried in plagiarized term papers, I stopped assigning take-home papers. In seven years as an instructor, I have never heard of a student being disciplined for plagiarism (though I do know of instructors who were fired for attempting to discipline student-plagiarists). Many students fail to comprehend the very concept. They understand only that copying from influential authors without attribution brings "A"s from most instructors, while angering others. Today's colleges have in effect institutionalized a "don't ask, don't tell" policy regarding plagiarism.

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31 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Just the facts, ma'am: modern plagiarism anatomized, August 25, 2002
By R. J. Stove (Gardenvale, Victoria Australia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
The great thing about Theodore Pappas' account is its transparent fair-mindedness. Pappas is interested solely in the ramifications of intellectual corruption; he isn't an apparatchik at all. Thus, his scrupulously documented account of MLK's (and other late-twentieth-century demigods') mania for literary theft can't be accused of ideological axe-grinding. He sets out the facts in the most sober manner possible. Moreover, his style is clear, trenchant and unassuming all at once.
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25 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Voice-merging" is nothing new, September 24, 2004
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was a PLAGIARIST as Pappas thoroughly documents in this important work. That Pappas was one of the few within the academy to outright condemn King's blatant plagiarism points to the generally sorry condition of the American intellectual tradition on many campuses today.

Pappas reviews the history of this case of plagiarism by a venerated civil rights leader and concludes with a mention of the irony of it all, "the King estate now enforces copyrights and demands royalties on work which King often stole in the first place . . . [from] the scores of other writers, ministers, scholars, and social activists whose work fell prey to King's 'voice merging'."

Of course, voice merging is nothing new. Wordthievery has been going on for as long as anybody can remember since the good ole days of frat-house file sharing on up to the modern paper databases and online paper "editing" and "research services". What King did is really no different from what many others have done--he just got caught for it, as Pappas notes, when his papers were turned over to scholars for research purposes (bad idea!!!--for King's legacy, anyhow).

This book is worth every penny. It oughta be on every public library shelf across the country. But censorship, threats--including death threats--claims of racism (unfounded--Pappas fairly assesses King's plagiarism), and other techniques for distorting the truth will continue to muddy the waters for those wanting to find out about these plagiarism charges.

Why did such a scholar have such a difficult time finding a publisher? Why have there been such vocal opponents of this fair-minded scholar simply for writing the truth about Dr. Martin Luther King,Jr. ? Important questions that demand an answer.

A "brave book" indeed as Eugene Genovese notes in his forward. All the more so in the current stifling, censoring, intimidating, suffocating atmosphere created by the "complacency of the multicultural left". They hate this book! They don't want you to read this book!

Buy a copy, check it out from your local library (if it hasn't been removed by a misguided multicultural lefty), sit down, take a deep breath, and read this brave book. You'll be astonished, quite possibly outraged, and most certainly not disappointed. It's not about race at all. It's about more basic things such as intellectual honesty, cribbing, textual thievery, discipline-specific (theology in King's case) incompetency, and a cover-up sham perpetrated by members of academia whose knees knocked together for fear of revealing what they had discovered.

Dr. Herbert Ulysses Quickwit

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars A Revealing Look at Martin Luther King, Jr.
Theodore Pappas focused much of this book on the lies and chicanery of Martin Luther King, Jr. and his many apologists. Read more
Published 18 months ago by David Thomson

5.0 out of 5 stars Thief
It seems clear from Pappas' book that M.L. King stole other people's intellectual property, copyrighted it, and that his family/estate continues to bill any publication or... Read more
Published on January 3, 2007 by R. Young

3.0 out of 5 stars MLK Bogus!
I wish people really knew more about this book. They would realize Martin Luther King had an agenda to split the United States up, to help the Hollywood Communists continue their... Read more
Published on January 16, 2006 by baruba

5.0 out of 5 stars The Loss of Intellectual Integrity
A very honest and forthright book. Should be required reading in any course concerning Dr King.
Published on January 22, 2004

1.0 out of 5 stars White Suprematist Nonsense
Pappas shows that portions of King's academic writings and speeches were plagarized. He ignores that King's teachers would have recognized the plagarism and decided to let it go... Read more
Published on September 21, 2003

4.0 out of 5 stars Great research, poor structure
Pappas' reasearch is very engaging. Yes King did steal his most famous essays and speechs and back his theory up with hard facts. Read more
Published on May 5, 2003 by C. Chow

5.0 out of 5 stars Sobering
Theodore Pappas' book is a devastating look at the state of academia and "scholarship." The treatment of MLK, Jr's dissertation is especially troubling.
Published on June 22, 2000

3.0 out of 5 stars Stealing Play Money Is Not The Same As Stealing Real Money
Pappas argues that Martin Luther King Jr.'s plagiarism was aserious crime because it was ultimately the theft of thought (p 23). He gives seven examples from King's Ph. Read more
Published on January 18, 2000 by John Hartung...

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