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Astronomers & Astrophysicists - Biography, Physicists - Biography, Police & Law Enforcement Officers - Biography, U.S. Politics & Government - 1945 - 1989, General & Miscellaneous U.S. Political Biography, U.S. Politics & Government - 1945-1953, Law Enfor
The Einstein file by Fred Jerome — book cover

The Einstein file

by Fred Jerome
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Overview

From the moment of Einstein's arrival in the U.S. in l933 until his death in l955, J. Edgar Hoover's FBI, with help from several other federal agencies, busied itself collecting "derogatory information" in an effort to undermine Einstein's influence and destroy his prestige. For the first time Fred Jerome tells the story of that anti-Einstein campaign, as well as the story behind it—why and how the campaign originated, and thereby provides the first detailed picture of Einstein's little known political activism.

Unlike the popular image of Einstein as an absent-minded, head-in-the-clouds genius, the man was in fact intensely politically active and felt it was his duty to use his world-wide fame shrewdly in the cause of social justice. A passionate pacifist, socialist, internationalist and outspoken critic of racism (Einstein considered racism America's "worst disease"), and personal friend of Paul Robeson and W.E.B. DuBois, Einstein used his immense prestige to denounce McCarthy at the height of his power, publicly urging witnesses to refuse to testify before HUAC.

The story that emerges not only reveals a little known aspect of Einstein's character, but underscores the dangers that can arise, to threaten the American Republic and the rule of law, in times of obsession with national security.

About the Author, Fred Jerome

Fred Jerome is a senior consultant to the Gene Media Forum, Newhouse School of Communications, Syracuse University. His articles and op-ed pieces have appeared in many publications, including Newsweek and The New York Times. As a reporter in the South during the early 1960s, he covered the exploding civil rights movement, and, more recently, has taught journalism at Columbia, New York University, and other New York-area universities. He established the Media Resource Center, a widely acclaimed telephone referral service putting thousands of journalists in touch with scientists.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Not only did J. Edgar Hoover keep a well-guarded (and sometimes comically erroneous) secret file on Albert Einstein, reveals Jerome, a journalist and consultant to Syracuse University's Newhouse School of Communications, he actively sought to have the physicist deported. Though Einstein was far too popular to be brought down by Hoover's normal smear tactics (even when covertly laundered through congressional committees), his file was filled with 1,800 pages of raw materials. But the lists of organizations he supported (antifascist, pacifist and antiracist) and "unsavory" people he knew, such as Paul Robeson, lacked bite, since Einstein (unlike his biographers) happily publicized these associations. Accusations of subversive activity ranged from the surreal (mind control and death rays) to carelessly recycled Nazi propaganda. Hoover's only hope lay in exposing Einstein as a Soviet spy, a task he fruitlessly pursued from 1950 to 1955 (when Einstein died). Einstein revealed as anything but politically na ve fought back against this chilling rerun of his experience in Germany 20 years earlier by calling for civil disobedience in resisting McCarthy and the House un-American Activities Committee, the most radical statement by any major figure at the time. Jerome suggests that popular history has been twisted by this encounter. If Hoover utterly failed to limit Einstein's political influence in his lifetime, Jerome argues, he helped depoliticize Einstein's image, reducing his impact on future generations, a process this book should help reverse. 16 pages of b&w photos not seen by PW. (May) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

It is not surprising that J. Edgar Hoover's FBI spied on Albert Einstein from 1933 to his death in 1955. As this well-done study makes clear, the famous scientist was also a social and political activist with strong pacifist and Socialist leanings. Einstein publicly supported the civil rights and anti-lynching movements and was a friend of leading African Americans. Unafraid, he was willing to denounce Joseph McCarthy and encouraged others to refuse to testify before him. These activities, plus his role in the development of nuclear weapons, led Hoover to investigate Einstein in search of "derogatory information," hoping to discredit and eventually deport him. While Hoover wanted to discover that Einstein was a Communist, his agents also collected crazy stories such as that one of Einstein's children was held hostage by the Soviets. Journalist Jerome uses Einstein's 2000-page FBI file plus interviews with people familiar with the case to tell this story. Perhaps the most useful aspect of this excellent book is that it reminds readers of the less-celebrated aspect of Einstein's character: he was ready and willing to participate in the political arena. For all libraries. Stephen L. Hupp, West Virginia Univ., Parkersburg Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

From The Critics

In addition to revealing yet more of the now too common injustices by unpoliced police agencies, Jerome (communications, Syracuse U.) revives the political dimension of the famous scientist that is routinely purged from the official portrayal of him: his intense commitment to social justice, his anti-racism, and his response to McCarthyism. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

Kirkus Reviews

Technology Review columnist Jerome turns a brief newspaper reference he saw by chance into a fascinating account of the world-famous scientist's harassment by the FBI. Dozens of previous books have documented Hoover's surveillance of public figures, especially those he considered disloyal to his nation. But Albert Einstein, the genius physicist? Researching a project on the most prominent science stories of the 20th century, Jerome tracked references to Einstein published after his death in 1955. On page 17 of the New York Times business section for Sept. 9, 1983, he came across the headline "FBI Filed Reports on Einstein as a Spy and Kidnap Plotter." Interested and puzzled, he used the Freedom of Information Act to obtain the FBI's file on Einstein. What he found in those documents was the story not of Einstein the scientist, but of Einstein the crusader for civil rights on behalf of blacks, victims of anti-Communist witch-hunts, and other persecuted individuals. Although this is decidedly not a full biography of Einstein (the author counts at least 300 of those already), the monograph provides considerable enlightenment about aspects of his life apart from what the FBI recorded. The Bureau's files, not so incidentally, are filled with rumor and factual inaccuracies galore; the supposedly crackerjack law-enforcement agency comes across here as a den of law-breaking buffoons. Jerome suggests that Hoover and his agents cared less about truthfulness than about silencing celebrities who had left-wing ideas and intimidating the remaining population. Einstein emerges as a hero, refusing to let the federal government's underhanded tactics discourage his support of unpopular causes. Awell-written, provocative account that could alter our views of both Hoover and Einstein

Book Details

Published
June 26, 2002
Publisher
New York : St. Martin's Press, 2002.
Pages
384
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780312288563

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