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Joseph McCarthy: Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America's Most Hated Senator

door Arthur Herman

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942287,578 (3.5)7
Was Joe McCarthy a bellicose, shameless witch-hunter who whipped up hysteria, ruined the reputation of innocents, and unleashed a destructive carnival of smears and guilt-by-association accusations? Were McCarthy and McCarthyism the worst things to happen to American politics in the postwar era? Or was McCarthy just a well-intentioned politician who seized a legitimate issue with the fervor of a true believer? Perhaps something in between. For the first time, here is a biography of Joe McCarthy that cuts through the cliches and misconceptions surrounding this central figure of the "red scare" of the fifties, and reexamines his life and legacy in the light of newly declassified archival sources from the FBI, the National Security Agency, the U.S. Congress, the Pentagon, and the former Soviet Union. After more than four decades, here is the untold story of America's most hated political figure, shorn of the rhetoric and stereotypes of the past. Joseph McCarthy explains how this farm boy from Wisconsin sprang up from a newly confident postwar America, and how he embodied the hopes and anxieties of a generation caught in the toils of the Cold War. It shows how McCarthy used the explosive issue of Communist spying in the thirties and forties to challenge the Washington political establishment and catapult himself into the headlines. Above all, it gives us a picture of the red scare far different from and more accurate than the one typically portrayed in the news media and the movies. We now know that the Communist spying McCarthy fought against was amazingly extensive -- reaching to the highest levels of the White House and the top-secret Manhattan Project. Herman has the facts to show in detail which of McCarthy's famous anti-Communist investigations were on target (such as the notorious cases of Owen Lattimore and Irving Peress, the Army's "pink dentist") and which were not (including the case that led to McCarthy's final break with Whittaker Chambers). When McCarthy accused two American employees of the United Nations of being Communists, he was widely criticized -- but he was right. When McCarthy called Owen Lattimore "Moscow's top spy," he was again assailed -- but we now know Lattimore was a witting aid to Soviet espionage networks. McCarthy often overreached himself. "But McCarthy was often right." In Joseph McCarthy, Arthur Herman reveals the human drama of a fascinating, troubled, and self-destructive man who was often more right than wrong, and yet in the end did more harm than good.… (meer)
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In a review entitled "The Other Shoe Remains Aloft," Richard M. Fried reviews Herman's biography and finds that Herman fails to rehabilitate McCarthy. Despite the fact that the declassification of records from Project VENONA (intercepted Soviet cable traffic from the war) revealed that many people accused of having spied for the Russians actually had done so, McCarthy still stands as the boorish political hack we always knew him as. The logic of the book, so Balogh, is that since there were indeed communists in government and the liberals were too weak to do anything about it, McCarthy did a valuable service. Balogh proposes instead that the attacks of McCarthy were largely welcomed as a welcome addition to the partisan political attempts of the Republicans to roll back the last decades of New Deal (and then Square Deal) Liberalism. If VENONA proved that Harry Dexter White and Laughlin Currie were indeed on the Soviet payroll, then why did McCarthy stumble about for so long without offering the equivalent of Nixon's case against Alger Hiss? In some ways, it may be time to reassess the legacy of the Cold War but recasting McCarthy as something of a tragic figure (as Herman wants us to believe) stretches our conceptual flexibility just a little too far. None of this anti-liberal animus which Balogh faults the book for comes out in the BookNotes interview. If Herman is giving us a Neo-Conservative revisionist view of Tail Gunner Joe, it is unlikely that many will be convinced.
1 stem mdobe | Jul 24, 2011 |
The thesis of this book is that McCarthy is too much maligned in history. More specifically, that many of the issues he raised have turned out to be more valid than is assumed in the popular view of this man.

I like revisionist history a great deal, so I was very much looking forward to this read. For me, Herman didn't prove his points. For me the core of McCarthy hatred is based more in accusations without evidence and in vilifying individuals for their real or assumed points of view. That there were communists in the State Department or wherever does not diminish the fact that McCarthy made accusations without evidence, and that someone sworn to uphold and defend the Constitution should be held to a very high standard in that regard. He was a (would be) demagogue.

That said, I revised my star rating upward because of the bravery of this author to take on a topic and a POV that are generally not welcome. That is, of course, what makes revisionist history potentially powerful, and I want to thank the author for that courage. ( )
1 stem Oreillynsf | Jul 5, 2010 |
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Was Joe McCarthy a bellicose, shameless witch-hunter who whipped up hysteria, ruined the reputation of innocents, and unleashed a destructive carnival of smears and guilt-by-association accusations? Were McCarthy and McCarthyism the worst things to happen to American politics in the postwar era? Or was McCarthy just a well-intentioned politician who seized a legitimate issue with the fervor of a true believer? Perhaps something in between. For the first time, here is a biography of Joe McCarthy that cuts through the cliches and misconceptions surrounding this central figure of the "red scare" of the fifties, and reexamines his life and legacy in the light of newly declassified archival sources from the FBI, the National Security Agency, the U.S. Congress, the Pentagon, and the former Soviet Union. After more than four decades, here is the untold story of America's most hated political figure, shorn of the rhetoric and stereotypes of the past. Joseph McCarthy explains how this farm boy from Wisconsin sprang up from a newly confident postwar America, and how he embodied the hopes and anxieties of a generation caught in the toils of the Cold War. It shows how McCarthy used the explosive issue of Communist spying in the thirties and forties to challenge the Washington political establishment and catapult himself into the headlines. Above all, it gives us a picture of the red scare far different from and more accurate than the one typically portrayed in the news media and the movies. We now know that the Communist spying McCarthy fought against was amazingly extensive -- reaching to the highest levels of the White House and the top-secret Manhattan Project. Herman has the facts to show in detail which of McCarthy's famous anti-Communist investigations were on target (such as the notorious cases of Owen Lattimore and Irving Peress, the Army's "pink dentist") and which were not (including the case that led to McCarthy's final break with Whittaker Chambers). When McCarthy accused two American employees of the United Nations of being Communists, he was widely criticized -- but he was right. When McCarthy called Owen Lattimore "Moscow's top spy," he was again assailed -- but we now know Lattimore was a witting aid to Soviet espionage networks. McCarthy often overreached himself. "But McCarthy was often right." In Joseph McCarthy, Arthur Herman reveals the human drama of a fascinating, troubled, and self-destructive man who was often more right than wrong, and yet in the end did more harm than good.

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