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Why the Dreyfus Affair Matters (Why X Matters Series) Paperback – September 28, 2010
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From the prize-winning author of Wartime Lies, an anatomy of the infamous prosecution of a Jewish officer attached to the French Army's General Staff, with profound implications for our own time.
In December 1894, Captain Alf
- Print length272 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherYale University Press
- Publication dateSeptember 28, 2010
- Dimensions5 x 0.68 x 7 inches
- ISBN-100300168144
- ISBN-13978-0300168143
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Review
"In thousands of political battles―including those over the Iraq war―Western publics have relived the Dreyfus Affair ever since."―Andrew Moravcsik, Foreign Affairs
-- Andrew Moravcsik ― Foreign Affairs Published On: 2010-01-31“I can’t imagine a more unequivocal, socially acute, or legally astute book about the whole hateful Dreyfus Affair than Louis Begley’s “Why Dreyfus Matters.” Add to that the limpidity, the novelist’s eye, the moral passion, and the very considerable narrative gifts that have made Begley’s fiction famous, and you have one of French history’s most tellingly muddled moments, distilled and restored to the drama it in fact was for the country it divided.”―Jane Kramer
― Jane Kramer“Begley's riveting details and unremitting passion make this book a worthy successor to J'accuse.”--Jewish Book World
― Jewish Book World“Particularly powerful in drawing lessons for American society after September 11.”--Robert Gildea, New York Review of Books
-- Robert Gildea ― New York Review of Books
"Begley's own contribution to dispelling silence and indifference consists in deftly retelling the story of the Dreyfus Affair and explicitly connecting it to our times. . . . The Dreyfus Affair will continue to matter as long as there are those prepared to defend human rights and the dignity of every human life against claims of expediency, reasons of state and official miscarriages of justice."―Ruth Scurr, The New York Times -- Ruth Scurr ― New York Times Published On: 2009-12-13
Selected as a Favorite Book of the Year, The New Yorker ― New Yorker Published On: 2009-12-14
"A compact treatment of a complex case."―New Yorker (one of the "Reviewers' favorites from 2009") ― New Yorker Published On: 2009-12-14
“A brave new book [and] a pointed warning and reminder of how fragile the standards of civilized conduct prove in moments of national panic.”―Adam Gopnik, The New Yorker
-- Adam Gopnik ― New Yorker Published On: 2009-09-01"No other work in English on the Dreyfus Affair matches the clarity, the concision, and the passion of this one. A lawyer and novelist, Louis Begley explains the legal technicalities and untangles a byzantine narrative. He shows why this abuse of power should still concern us today."― Robert O. Paxton, author of The Anatomy of Fascism ― Robert Paxton
"...a brilliant work of historical storytelling, reminding us to what extent the drama is in the detail." — The Jewish Chronicle
-- Natasha Lehrer ― The Jewish Chronicle Published On: 2010-01-22"Begley['s] prose is as crisp as his resume is distinguished. His book is a fluid, confident survey that clearly sketches the chronology, main players, and historical and literary legacy of the affair while making a provocative comparison to the war on terror."--Michael O'Donnell, Washington Monthly -- Michael O'Donnell ― Washington Monthly
"Louis Begley's Why the Dreyfus Affair Matters is a slim, elegant work--another impressive volume in Yale University Press's 'Why X Matters' series."--Michael O'Donnell, Washington Monthly
-- Michael O'Donnell ― Washington Monthly
"Concise and precise."--Robert Birnbaum, The Morning News
-- Robert Birnbaum ― The Morning News
"Begley is a brilliant choice...And he has written a brilliant book, using a lawyer's skill to marshal the facts and a novelist's art to relate them. The result is a history that drives the reader forward and occasionally steals his breath." - Journal of International Law and Politics
― Journal of International Law and Politics
“Begley provides a lucid and beautifully written account of L’affair Dreyfus from beginning to end.”
—Steven Lubet, The Green Bag
"Commendable for its narrative clarity."—Thomas Kselman, The Review of Politics -- Thomas Kselman ― The Review of Politics
"Louis Begley's Why the Dreyfus Affair Matters skillfully analyzes the forces that . . . divided a nation in a spectacular historical drama."—Sheldon Kirshner, The Canadian Jewish News -- Sheldon Kirshner ― The Canadian Jewish News
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Product details
- Publisher : Yale University Press (September 28, 2010)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 272 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0300168144
- ISBN-13 : 978-0300168143
- Item Weight : 10.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 5 x 0.68 x 7 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,085,982 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,221 in Espionage True Accounts
- #1,860 in Intelligence & Espionage History
- #4,076 in French History (Books)
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In a European society professing the liberalism of the nineteenth century, Alfred Dreyfus, a Jew and loyal French army officer, was kept horrifically imprisoned on Devil's Island for treason, though the army and judiciary knew him to be innocent. He was a Jew turned by government into a thing, a thing to be broken and shackled. In his years at Devil's Island, he became a burnt out case, a fore-shadow of the Holocaust for which Europe was making itself ready, and even today he is relevant to the anti-Semitism that is gearing up in Europe and this country. His grave stone's first entry after his death in 1935 is that of his twenty-five year old grand daughter, Madeleine Levy. Holding a mirror to history, the stone reads, "deportation by the Germans ...to Auschwitz." In 1950, France awarded her the Military Medal, the Croix de Guerre with palm, and the Medal of the Resistance.
Here is a culling of the complex facts of Why the Dreyfus Affair Matters:
In 1893, thirty-three year old Dreyfus was a captain on the anti-Semitic General Staff of the French army. He was rich and intellectually bright. In 1894, a military memorandum, a "bordereau", containing French military secrets, was found in the waste basket of Maximillien von Schwartzkoppen, military attache at the German embassy. Dreyfus's handwriting was in the cursive style taught to French school children, a style similar to the one in the bordereau. Handwriting comparisons by experts produced conflicting opinions. No motive for treason could be attributed to Dreyfus. No fact connected him to the bordereau. Nevertheless, he was arrested, as in a nightmare, for high treason. In order to gin up his prosecution, French military intelligence leaked information to the anti-Semitic press. No one yet knew that a French officer, the perfectly amoral, non-Jew, Major Esterhazay, was the traitor. The bordereau was written by him.
At Dreyfus's court-martial trial, the case began to falter. General Mercier, the minister of war, believer in the rule that the best evidence is the evidence one creates, secretly and criminally delivered to the tribunal a dossier secret in which a letter to Schwartzkoppen from the Italian military attache referred to "that swine D." In December, 1894, Dreyfus was found guilty, sentenced to life, and suffered an infamous public degradation ceremony during which an enraged mob screamed "Dirty Jew", "Judas", and "traitor". General Mercier, having implicated the tribunal, destroyed parts of the dossier secret and bound his French officer accomplices to secrecy. In February, a prison ship took Dreyfus to Devil's Island, 34.6 acres six miles off the coast of French Guiana. There in brutal, solitary confinement, and an obligatory silence, he was kept, ignorant of the outer world and so abused that in 1899 one government physician declared him unable to articulate and form sentences and another described him as a finished man. His sentence was all but capital. Rare is the reader who does not cringe at Begley's description of Dreyfus's suffering.
In 1895, Lieutenant Colonel Georges Picquart became chief of the army's intelligence bureau. Conventionally anti-Semitic, he nevertheless would become Dreyfus's savior.
In 1896, Esterhazy visited Schwartzkoppen at the German embassy where Schwartzkoppen expressed dissatisfaction with Esterhazy's supply of information and threatened to end their relationship. After French army intelligence obtained Schwartzkoppen's subsequent letter to Esterhazy, Picquart compared Esterhazy's handwriting with that in the bordereau. They were identical. He informed the General Staff that Esterhazy was the traitor and urged them to correct the injustice done to Dreyfus. A general, pre-figuring the Holocaust, asked him, "Why do you care if that Jew rots on Devil's Island?" He suggested that the matter be kept secret. Picquart answered that that is "abominable" and "I will not in any event take this secret with me to the grave". Instead of following their probable impulse to bury him, the General Staff transferred Picquart to eastern France and then to Northern Africa. Unknown to Picquart, Major Henry, Picquart's deputy, forged a letter from the Italian military attache to Schwartzkoppen in order to incriminate Dreyfus, and forged other letters to incriminate Picquart for leaking secret information.
In a nation ripped apart by the Dreyfus matter, Emile Zola, convinced of Dreyfus's innocence, entered the acrimonious struggle between right and left social forces. With the cunning encouragement of the General Staff , Esterhazy requested a court martial and was acquitted. After Zola's withering "J'accuse!" was published, he was tried for libel against the court martial officers, and was sentenced to one year. Picquart was cashiered from the army. Zola's conviction was reversed, he was retried, sentenced to one year, and fled to London. Major Henry's forgeries were discovered, he was sentenced to one year but served only one day during which he slit his throat. The news of his suicide caused the fleet footed Esterhazy, now cashiered from the army, to flee to England.
In 1899, the 1894 court martial judgment was reversed and Dreyfus, retried, was found guilty "with extenuating circumstances", left undescribed by the tribunal. He was sentenced to a reduced term of 10 years. Nine days later, he was pardoned. In 1904, the Court of Cassation reversed his conviction . He was reintegrated into the army as a major by legislative act, Picquart was returned as a Brigadier General, and Dreyfus was made a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor. In 1907, now forty-seven, he retired in disgust from the army as a captain, the rank he had held when arrested. The army had decided that his rank could not be increased because he had not been, as required, a major for two years, he had been pardoned but not acquitted, the five years he spent on Devil's Island were not creditable to him for the purpose of raising his rank , nor for that purpose were the more than six years thereafter spent by him to clear his name, a condition caused by the corrupt army.
In 1998, President Jacques Chirac publicly stated that Dreyfus's trials "were only pitiful mascarades" and that Dreyfus's "only crime was to be Jewish". Chirac would have been more eloquent had he spoke in memory of the 75,000 French Jews sent to their deaths by France's viciously anti-Semitic government in World War II. Accordingly, I memorialize, at random, Convoy 19 that left the Drancy transport in France for Auschwitz on August 14, 1942. Of the at least 1,015 deportees transported, 115 men were put to work and all the others, including women and little children, were gassed. I give their deaths in answer to the influence on France of the Dreyfus Affair.
Sitting alone for years on Devil's Island, Dreyfus had not known that he was at the furious center of the West's attention. Unwittingly, he became symbolic proof that modern pluralist liberalism might crack when those who govern saw their powers imperilled, as did the General Staff and France's right wing institutions. So viewed, Begley points to the hell created by the combined stupidity and cunning of Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld who created a parallel, hidden, unconstitutional world at Guantanamo, Abu Ghraid, and Bagram Air Base, a world of murder, torture, beatings, sexual assaults, electric shocks, water boarding, sleep deprivation, bright light bombardments, solitary confinement, CIA secret "black sites" in foreign countries, a world in which men were caged in dog crates, or were hung, their arms behind them, like crucified carcasses, or were sent for torture in Egypt, Morocco, Syria, Jordan, Uzbekistan, and Afghanistan.
The Dreyfus Affair does matter, notwithstanding that Dreyfus was only one and not one of thousands. Our souls are diminished when we are indifferent to the whipped Arab hanging from beams athwart his cell in Abu Ghraib or the young Jew taken from the street and murdered recently in France by anti-Semites. To Louis Begley who survived the Holocaust as a Polish boy living and moving about Poland for several years with his mother in that Nazi-occupied country, false identification papers in their pockets, indifference to injustice mattered much. He is silent about that history in his great book, but it must have infused the writing of it.
When I bought the book, I thought it was going to be a non-fiction description of the Dreyfus affair (about which I know little) with some implications to the present. Instead, I found the author deviating from straight non-fiction to liberal opinion about American foreign policy within the first 10% of the book.
While Begley's arguments may be perfectly good, his obvious liberal bias jumps up, slaps the moderate reader in the face, and stands in the way of an objective reading and understanding of the Dreyfus affair and its implications to present day.
Too bad because the idea for the book is a good one.
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However it's just another example of Amazon's shoddily slapped together e-books. The blurry and poorly proportionated font, the atrocious typographic errors (when will this Kindle crap ever come around to master syllable division?) make it an absolute pain to read. Any printer delivering this kind of quality on a real book would be well deservedly fired on the spot!



