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Owen Lattimore

Owen Lattimore (July 29, 1900 – May 31, 1989) was an American Orientalist and writer. He was an influential scholar of China and Central Asia, especially Mongolia. Although he never earned a college degree,[1] in the 1930s he was editor of Pacific Affairs, a journal published by the Institute of Pacific Relations, and then taught at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, from 1938 to 1963. He was director of the Walter Hines Page School of International Relations there from 1939 to 1953.[2] During World War II, he was an advisor to Chiang Kai-shek and the American government and contributed extensively to the public debate on American policy in Asia. From 1963 to 1970, Lattimore was the first Professor of Chinese Studies at the University of Leeds in England.[2]

Owen Lattimore
Owen Lattimore (around 1945)
Born(1900-07-27)July 27, 1900
DiedMay 31, 1989(1989-05-31) (aged 88)
Other namesChinese: 欧文·拉铁摩尔
Occupation(s)Orientalist, writer

In the early post-war period of McCarthyism and the Red Scare, American wartime "China Hands" were accused of being agents of the Soviet Union or under the influence of Marxism. In 1950, Senator Joseph McCarthy accused Lattimore in particular of being "the top Russian espionage agent in the United States."[2] The accusations led to years of Congressional hearings that did not substantiate the charge that Lattimore had been a spy. Soviet Venona cables, decoded during WWII and declassified decades later, have not referred to Lattimore as one of the Soviet agents active in the US. The hearings did document Lattimore's sympathetic statements about Stalin and the Soviet Union, however. Although charges of perjury were dismissed, the controversy put an end to Lattimore's role as a consultant of the U.S. State Department and eventually to his career in American academic life. He died in 1989 in Providence, Rhode Island, having resided in his later years in Pawtucket.[2]

Lattimore's "lifetime intellectual project", notes one recent scholar[who?], was to "develop a 'scientific' model of the way human societies form, evolve, grow, decline, mutate and interact with one another along 'frontiers'." He eclectically absorbed and often abandoned influential theories of his day that dealt with the great themes of history. These included the ecological determinism of Ellsworth Huntington; biological racism, though only to the extent of seeing characteristics which grew out of ecology; the economic geography and location theory; and some aspects of Marxist modes of production and stages of history, especially through the influence of Karl August Wittfogel. The most important and lasting influence, however, was Arnold J. Toynbee and his treatment of the great civilizations as organic wholes which were born, matured, grew old, and died. Lattimore's most influential book, The Inner Asian Frontiers of China (1940), used these theories to explain the history of East Asia not as the history of China and its influence on its neighbors, but as the interaction between two types of civilizations, settled farming and pastoral, each of which had its role in changing the other.[3]

Early life edit

 
"A halt on the march": Owen Lattimore in late 1926, on his first journey across Inner Asia. His diary from this journey on the "desert road to Turkestan" enabled him to write his first book, the start of his career as a scholar of the region.

Born in the United States, Lattimore was raised in Tianjin, China, where his parents, David and Margaret Lattimore, were teachers of English at a Chinese university. (His brother was the poet and classics scholar and translator Richmond Lattimore. One of his sisters was author Eleanor Frances Lattimore.)

After being schooled at home by his mother, he left China at the age of twelve and attended Collège Classique Cantonal near Lausanne, Switzerland. After war broke out in 1914, he was sent to England, where he was enrolled at St Bees School, Cumbria, England (1915–1919). He pursued literary interests, especially poetry, and briefly converted to Catholicism. He did well on the entrance exams for Oxford University, but returned to China in 1919 when it turned out that he would not have enough funds for attending university.[4]

He worked first for a newspaper and then for a British import/export related business. This gave him the opportunity to travel extensively in China and time to study Chinese with an old-fashioned Confucian scholar.[who?] His commercial travels also gave him a feel for the realities of life and the economy. A turning point was negotiating the passage of a trainload of wool through the lines of two battling warlords early in 1925, an experience which led him the next year to follow the caravans across Inner Mongolia to the end of the line in Xinjiang.[5]

The managers of his firm saw no advantage in subsidizing his travels but did send him to spend a final year of employment with them in Beijing as government liaison. During this year in Beijing before departing on his expedition, he met his wife, Eleanor Holgate. For their honeymoon they planned to travel from Beijing to India, he overland, she by rail across Siberia, a mammoth feat in the first half of the 20th century. In the event, the plans were disrupted and she had to travel alone by horse-drawn sled for 400 miles (640 km) in February to find him. She described her journey in Turkestan Reunion (1934), he in The Desert Road to Turkestan (1928) and High Tartary (1930). This trip laid the ground for his lifelong interest in all matters related to the Mongols and other peoples of the Silk Road.

Upon his return to America in 1928, he succeeded in receiving a fellowship from the Social Science Research Council for further travel in Manchuria, then for the academic year 1928/1929 as a student at Harvard University. He did not, however, enroll in a doctoral program, but returned to China 1930–1933 with fellowships from the Harvard–Yenching Institute and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.

He was awarded the Patron's Medal by the British Royal Geographical Society in 1942 for his travels in Central Asia.[6] In 1943, he was elected to the American Philosophical Society.[7]

Pacific Affairs and the Institute of Pacific Relations edit

In 1934, on the recommendation of treaty port journalist H.G.E. Woodhead, Lattimore was appointed editor of Pacific Affairs, published by the Institute of Pacific Relations, which he edited from Beijing. Rather than have bland official statements, he made it his policy to make the journal a "forum of controversy". As he later recalled, he was "continually in hot water, especially with the Japan Council, which thought I was too anti-imperialist, and the Soviet Council, which thought that its own anti-imperialist line was the only permissible one...." As explained below, others later accused him of motives which were less scholarly than political. Lattimore sought articles from a wide range of perspectives and made the journal a forum for new ideas, especially from the social sciences and social philosophy. Scholars and writers of all persuasions were contributors, including Pearl S. Buck, some Chinese literary figures, and dedicated Marxists.

IPR secretary Edward Carter was eager to solicit the participation of Soviet scholars, and insisted that Lattimore meet him in Moscow on his way back to the States. Lattimore had never been to the Soviet Union, having been denied a visa, and felt eager to obtain contributions from Soviet scholars, who had a distinguished tradition in Central Asian studies. But he was also wary because of the attacks Soviet scholars had made on him – Lattimore's "scholasticism is similar to Hamlet's madness" – and for publishing an article by Harold Isaacs, who they considered a Trotskyite. The Lattimores spent two weeks on the Trans-Siberian Railroad with their five-year-old son before arriving in Moscow for a two-week stay toward the end of March 1936. Soviet officials coldly demanded that the IPR and its journal support collective security arrangements against Japan. Lattimore responded that Pacific Affairs had the obligation to serve all the national councils, even the Japanese, and could not take political sides. Lattimore's request to visit the Mongolian People's Republic was denied on the grounds that "Mongolia now is constantly ready for war and conditions are very unstable." And in the end, Soviet scholars sent only one article to Pacific Affairs.[8]

After sojourns in New York and London, the Lattimores returned to Beijing in 1937. Owen visited the Communist headquarters at Yan'an to act as translator for T. A. Bisson and Philip Jaffé, who were gathering material for Amerasia, an activist journal of political commentary. There he met Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai. He was impressed with their candor, but had a less favorable experience on his visit to the party school for national minorities. When he spoke to the Mongols in Mongolian, his Chinese hosts broke off the session.[9]

The Lattimores left China in 1938. Owen spent six months in Berkeley, California, writing a draft of the Inner Asian Frontiers of China and continuing as editor of Pacific Affairs. As editor, he then made what Robert Newman, a sympathetic biographer, called "the most serious error of his career." Lattimore published an article by a pro-Soviet writer, whom Lattimore did not know, praising Stalin's purge trials because they strengthened the Soviet Union for the coming battle against Germany and Japan. Lattimore famously stated that the show trials "sound to me like democracy". Lattimore's misjudgment of the purge trials was undoubtedly influenced by his generally favorable evaluation of Soviet foreign policy, which emphasized international cooperation against Japan and Germany and his judgment that the Soviets had been supportive of Mongol autonomy. He was "nonetheless wrong," Newman concluded.[10]

He also soon wrote prominently against allowing Soviet expansion into China. As editor of Pacific Affairs he was expected to maintain a balance, but writing in another journal in the spring of 1940 he urged that "Above all, while we want to get Japan out of China, we do not want to let Russia in. Nor do we want to 'drive Japan into the arms of Russia.'" He continued: "the savagery of the Japanese assault is doing more to spread Communism than the teaching of the Chinese Communists themselves or the influences of Russia. It supplies the pressure under which the detonative ideas can work. At the same time it destroys Chinese wealth of every kind – capital, trade, revenue from agricultural rent – thus weakening that side of Chinese society which is most antagonistic to Communism."[11]

The Middlesboro Daily News ran an article by Owen Lattimore which reported on Japan's planned offensive into a Hui Muslim region of China in 1938, which predicted that the Japanese would suffer a massive crushing defeat at the hands of the Muslims.[12] In 1940, the Japanese were crushed and routed by the Muslims at the Battle of West Suiyuan. The Japanese planned to invade Ningxia from Suiyuan in 1939 and create a Hui Muslim puppet state. The following year in 1940, the Japanese were defeated militarily by the Kuomintang Muslim General Ma Hongbin, who caused the plan to collapse. Ma Hongbin's Hui Muslim troops launched further attacks against Japan in the Battle of West Suiyuan.[13][14] In Suiyuan 300 Mongol collaborators serving the Japanese were fought off by a single Muslim who held the rank of Major at the Battle of Wulan Obo in 1939 April.[15]

World War II edit

Following the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed Lattimore to serve as US advisor to Chinese Nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek for one and a half years. Lattimore advocated on behalf of the ethnic minorities in China, arguing that China should adopt a cultural autonomy policy based on the Soviet Union's minority policy, which he regarded as "one of the most successful Soviet policies." His advice was mostly disregarded by Chiang's officials, as defense secretary Wang Ch'ung-hui suspected Lattimore of understating Soviet interference in Xinjiang and Outer Mongolia.[16]

In 1944, Lattimore was placed in charge of the Pacific area for the Office of War Information. By this time, Lattimore's political activities and associations had been under scrutiny for the last two years by the FBI, which recommended Lattimore be put under "Custodial Detention in case of National Emergency".[17]

At President Roosevelt's request, he accompanied U.S. Vice-President Henry A. Wallace on a mission to Siberia, China, and Mongolia in 1944 for the U.S. Office of War Information. The trip had been arranged by Lauchlin Currie, who recommended to FDR that Lattimore accompany Wallace.[18] During this visit, which overlapped the D-Day landings, Wallace and his delegates stayed 25 days in Siberia and were given a tour of the Soviet Union's Magadan Gulag camp at Kolyma. In a travelogue for National Geographic, Lattimore described what little he saw as a combination of the Hudson's Bay Company and the Tennessee Valley Authority, remarking on how strong and well-fed the inmates were and ascribing to camp commandant Ivan Nikishov "a trained and sensitive interest in art and music and also a deep sense of civic responsibility".[19] In a letter written to the New Statesman in 1968, Lattimore justified himself by arguing his role had not been one to "snoop on his hosts."[20] (In contrast, camp commander Naftaly Frenkel explained: "We have to squeeze everything out of a prisoner in the first three months – after that we don't need him anymore."[21] The system of hard labor and minimal or no food reduced most prisoners to helpless "goners" (dokhodyaga, in Russian). Conditions varied depending on the state of the country.)

During the 1940s, Lattimore came into increasing conflict with another member of the IPR's board, Alfred Kohlberg, a manufacturer with long experience in the China trade whose visit to China in 1943 convinced him that stories of Chiang Kai-shek's corruption were false. He accused Lattimore of being hostile to Chiang and too sympathetic towards the Chinese Communist Party.

In 1944, relations between Kohlberg and Lattimore became so bad that Kohlberg left the IPR and founded a new journal, Plain Talk, in which he attempted to rebut the claims made in Pacific Affairs. By the late 1940s, Lattimore had become a particular target of Kohlberg and other members of the China Lobby. Kohlberg was later to become an advisor to Senator Joseph McCarthy, and it is possible that McCarthy first learned of Lattimore's communist tendencies through Kohlberg.[22]

Accused of espionage edit

Meanwhile, accusations were made, which later became public. On 14 December 1948, Alexander Barmine, former chargé d'affaires at the Soviet Embassy in Athens, Greece, advised Federal Bureau of Investigation agents that Soviet GRU Director Yan Karlovich Berzin had informed him prior to Barmine's 1937 defection that Lattimore was a Soviet agent, an allegation Barmine would repeat under oath before the Senate McCarran Committee in 1951.[23][24][25]

Congressional investigation edit

In March 1950, in executive session of the Tydings Committee, Senator Joseph McCarthy accused Lattimore of being the top Soviet agent, either in the US, in the State Department, or both.[26] The committee, chaired by Senator Millard Tydings, was investigating McCarthy's claims of widespread Soviet infiltration of the State Department. When the accusation was leaked to the press, McCarthy backed off from the charge that Lattimore was a spy but continued the attack in public session of the committee and in speeches.

Lattimore, he said, "in view of his position of tremendous power at the State Department" was the "'architect' of our Far Eastern policy" and asked whether Lattimore's "aims are American aims or whether they coincide with the aims of Soviet Russia." At the time, Lattimore was in Kabul, Afghanistan, on a cultural mission for the United Nations. Lattimore dismissed the charges against him as "moonshine" and hurried back to the United States to testify before the Tydings Committee.[27]

McCarthy, who had no evidence of specific acts of espionage and only weak evidence that Lattimore was a concealed Communist, in April 1950 persuaded Louis F. Budenz, the now-anticommunist former editor of the Communist Party organ Daily Worker, to testify. Budenz had no first-hand knowledge of Lattimore's Communist allegiance and had never previously identified him as a Communist in his extensive FBI interviews. In addition, Budenz had in 1947 told a State Department investigator that he "did not recall any instances" that suggested that Lattimore was a Communist and had also told his editor at Collier's magazine in 1949 that Lattimore had never "acted as a Communist in any way."[28]

Now, however, Budenz testified that Lattimore was a secret Communist but not a Soviet agent; he was a person of influence who often assisted Soviet foreign policy. Budenz said his party superiors had told him that Lattimore's "great value lay in the fact that he could bring the emphasis in support of Soviet policy in non-Soviet language."[29] The majority report of the Tydings committee cleared Lattimore of all charges against him; the minority report accepted Budenz's charges.

In February 1952, Lattimore was called to testify before the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee (SISS), headed by McCarthy's ally, Senator Pat McCarran. Before Lattimore was called as witness, investigators for the SISS had seized all of the records of the Institute of Pacific Relations (IPR).[30] The twelve days of testimony were marked by shouting matches, which pitted McCarran and McCarthy on one side against Lattimore on the other. Lattimore took three days to deliver his opening statement: the delays were caused by frequent interruptions as McCarran challenged Lattimore point by point. McCarran then used the records from the IPR to ask questions that often taxed Lattimore's memory. Budenz again testified, but this time claimed that Lattimore was both a Communist and a Soviet agent.

The subcommittee also summoned scholars. Nicholas Poppe, a Russian émigré and a scholar of Mongolia and Tibet, resisted the committee's invitation to label Lattimore a Communist but found some of his writings superficial and uncritical.[citation needed] The most damaging testimony came from Karl August Wittfogel, supported by his colleague from the University of Washington, George Taylor. Wittfogel, a former Communist, said that at the time Lattimore edited the journal Pacific Affairs, Lattimore knew of his Communist background; even though they had not exchanged words on the matter, Lattimore had given Wittfogel a "knowing smile."

Lattimore acknowledged that Wittfogel's thought had been tremendously influential but said that if there had been a smile, it was a "non-Communist smile". Wittfogel and Taylor charged that Lattimore had done "great harm to the free world" in disregarding the need to defeat world Communism as a first priority. John K. Fairbank, in his memoirs, suggests that Wittfogel may have said this because he had been made to leave Germany for having views unacceptable to the powers that be, and he did not want to make the same mistake twice. They also asserted that the influence of Marxism on Lattimore was shown by his use of the word "feudal." Lattimore replied that he did not think that Marxists had a "patent" on that word.[31]

In 1952, after 17 months of study and hearing, involving 66 witnesses and thousands of documents, the McCarran Committee issued its 226-page, unanimous final report. This report stated that "Owen Lattimore was, from some time beginning in the 1930s, a conscious articulate instrument of the Soviet conspiracy," and that on "at least five separate matters," Lattimore had not told the whole truth. One example: "The evidence... shows conclusively that Lattimore knew Frederick V. Field to be a Communist; that he collaborated with Field after he possessed this knowledge; and that he did not tell the truth before the subcommittee about this association with Field...."[32]

On February 16, 1952, Lattimore was indicted for perjury on seven counts. Six of the counts related to various discrepancies between Lattimore's testimony and the IPR records; the seventh accused Lattimore of seeking to deliberately deceive the SISS. Lattimore's defenders, such as his lawyer Abe Fortas, claimed that the discrepancies were caused by McCarran deliberately asking questions about arcane and obscure matters that took place in the 1930s.[33][34]

Within three years, federal judge Luther Youngdahl dismissed the perjury charges on technical grounds.[35] United States v. Lattimore, 127 F. Supp. 405 (D.D.C. 1955).

Four of the charges were dismissed as insubstantial and not judicable; denying that he was sympathetic to communism was too vague to be fairly answered; and the other counts were matters of little concern, those for which a jury would be unlikely to convict on matters of political judgment.[36] In his book Ordeal by Slander, Lattimore gives his own account of these events up until 1950.

In his 1979 memoir, former FBI agent William C. Sullivan said that, despite Hoover's relentless efforts, the FBI never found "anything substantial" and that the accusations against Lattimore were "ridiculous."[37]

Legacy edit

 
Lattimore (Amsterdam, 1967)
 
Ti-Ch'in in Amsterdam (the Netherlands), 1967. (Teach-in on China). Left to right: K.S. Karol (=Karol Kewes), Bertus Hendriks, George Cammelbeeck, Stuart Schram & Owen Lattimore

In 1963, he was recruited from Johns Hopkins University to establish the Department of Chinese Studies (now East Asian Studies) at the University of Leeds. In addition to setting up Chinese Studies, he promoted Mongolian Studies, building good relations between Leeds and Mongolia and establishing a programme in Mongolian Studies in 1968. He remained at Leeds until he retired as Emeritus Professor in 1970.

In 1984 the University of Leeds conferred the degree of Doctor of Letters (DLitt) on Emeritus Professor Lattimore honoris causa.[38]

Lattimore had a lifelong dedication to establishing research centres to further the study of Mongolian history and culture. In 1979 he became the first Westerner to be awarded the Order of the Polar Star, the highest award that the Mongolian state gives to foreigners. The State Museum in Ulaanbaatar named a newly discovered dinosaur after him in 1986.[39]

The American Centre for Mongolian Studies, together with the International Association of Mongolian Studies and the National University of Mongolia School of Foreign Service, organized a conference entitled "Owen Lattimore: The Past, Present, and Future of Inner Asian Studies" in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, on August 20 and 21, 2008.[40]

Prominent figures in the anti-Communist American political left offered mixed evaluations of Lattimore's legacy in foreign policy. Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. thought that while Lattimore was not a Soviet spy, he may have been a fellow traveler who was deeply committed to communist ideals, and Sidney Hook similarly proclaimed Latimore "a devious and skillful follower of the Communist Party line on Asian affairs”.[41]

Theory edit

Historian Peter Perdue wrote that "Modern historians, anthropologists, and archaeologists have revised many of Lattimore's arguments, but they still rely on his insights. All of the themes addressed by Lattimore continue to inspire world historians today."[42]

In An Inner Asian Approach to the Historical Geography of China (1947), Lattimore explored the system through which humanity affects the environment and is changed by it, and concluded that civilization is molded by its own impact on the environment. He lists the following pattern:

  1. A primitive society pursues some agricultural activities, but is aware that it has many limitations.
  2. Growing and evolving, the society begins to change the environment. For example, depleting its game supply and wild crops, it begins to domesticate animals and plants. It deforests land to create room for these activities.
  3. The environment changes, offering new opportunities. For example, it becomes grasslands.
  4. Society changes in response, and reacts to the new opportunities as a new society. For example, the once-nomads build permanent settlements and shift from a hunter-gatherer mentality to a farming society culture.
  5. The reciprocal process continues, offering new variations.

Publications edit

References edit

  1. ^ Newman (1992), p. 527.
  2. ^ a b c d Pace, Eric (June 1, 1989). "Owen Lattimore, Far East Scholar Accused by McCarthy, Dies at 88". The New York Times. Retrieved March 11, 2008.
  3. ^ Rowe (2007), pp. 758–760.
  4. ^ Newman (1992), pp. 5–6.
  5. ^ Lattimore, Owen (1928) The Desert Road to Turkestan; pp. 5–8. He euphemistically describes the experience as being "sent 'up-country' once to try to get hold of some wool".
  6. ^ "List of Past Gold Medal Winners" (PDF). Royal Geographical Society. Retrieved August 24, 2015.
  7. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved April 12, 2023.
  8. ^ Newman (1992), pp. 28–29.
  9. ^ Owen Lattimore, Studies in Frontier History, London 1962, pp. 12–20
  10. ^ Newman 40–41.
  11. ^ "American Responsibilities in the Far East." Virginia Quarterly Review 16 (Spring 1940): 161–174, quoted in Newman pp. 44–45.
  12. ^ "Middlesboro Daily News – Google News Archive Search".
  13. ^ Xiaoyuan Liu (2004). Frontier Passages: Ethnopolitics and the Rise of Chinese Communism, 1921–1945. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-4960-2.
  14. ^ The China Monthly Review. J.W. Powell. 1937. p. 320.
  15. ^ China Magazine. 1940. p. 18.
  16. ^ Liu, Xiaoyuan (2010). Recast All Under Heaven: Revolution, War, Diplomacy, and Frontier China in the 20th Century. Continuum. pp. 88–89.
  17. ^ FBI Report, "Owen Lattimore, Internal Security – R, Espionage – R," September 8, 1949 (FBI file: Owen Lattimore), pg. 7 (PDF pg. 12): Six years prior to Barmine's 1948 FBI interview, the agency had already compiled a thick security dossier at the onset of World War II on Lattimore, recommending that he be put under "Custodial Detention in case of National Emergency".
  18. ^ Roger James Sandilands, The Life and Political Economy of Lauchlin Currie (Durham: Duke University Press, 1990), ISBN 0-8223-1030-9, pg. 151
  19. ^ Paul Hollander, The Survival of the Adversary Culture: Social Criticism and Political Escapism in American Society (New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, (1988) 1991; ISBN 1-56000-554-8, pg. 180
  20. ^ "'Is it assumed that a visit of this kind affords an ideal opportunity to snoop on one's hosts?'... He went so far as to imply that after all Nikishov, the camp commander, could not have been such a tyrant ("the unspeakable Nikishov... must have slipped up in his control") since Elinor Lipper survived to write her book. He seemed to suggest that being on a goodwill mission and allied to the Soviet Union were good enough explanations for the euphoric accounts he and Wallace produced.'" Paul Hollander, The Survival of the Adversary Culture: ibid. pg. 181
  21. ^ Solzhenitsyn, A. The Gulag Archipelago, vol. 2, pg. 49.
  22. ^ John Thomas, Ch. 2, "Kohlberg and the China Lobby," The Institute of Pacific Relations, esp. pp. 39–40.
  23. ^ FBI Report, Owen Lattimore, Internal Security – R, Espionage – R, September 8, 1949 (FBI File: Owen Lattimore, Part 1A), p. 2 (PDF p. 7)
  24. ^ Absent-Minded Professor?, Time magazine, Monday, Mar. 10, 1952
  25. ^ Testimony of Alexander Barmine, July 31, 1951, U. S. Congress, Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Internal Security Subcommittee, Institute of Pacific Relations, Hearings, 82nd Congress, First Session (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1951), Part 1, pp. 199–200
  26. ^ Evans, M. Stanton (May 30, 1997). . Human Events. Archived from the original on October 12, 2007. Retrieved December 16, 2009. This was McCarthy's showdown with Prof. Lattimore, of Johns Hopkins University, a long-time official of IPR, and noted authority on Far Eastern questions. Of all the internal security battles that McCarthy fought, this was by far the most explosive.
  27. ^ Quotes from "Owen Lattimore, Espionage – R", Ch 29 of M. Stanton Evans's Blacklisted by History: The untold story of Senator Joe McCarthy and his fight against America's enemies (New York: Crown Forum, 2007), pp. 385–398. Further documentation of specifics charges is to be found in: FBI Report, "Owen Lattimore, Internal Security – R, Espionage – R", September 8, 1949 (FBI file: Owen Lattimore), pg. 1 (PDF p. 2); Robert P. Newman, Owen Lattimore and the "Loss" of China (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992), ISBN 0-520-07388-6, pg. 52; On December 14, 1948, Alexander Barmine, former Charge d'Affairs at the Soviet Embassy in Athens, Greece, advised FBI investigators that then-GRU (Soviet Military Intelligence) chief General Berzin informed him prior to his 1937 defection that Owen Lattimore was a Soviet agent; FBI Report, "Owen Lattimore, Internal Security – R, Espionage – R", September 8, 1949 (FBI File: Owen Lattimore, Part 1A), pg. 2 (PDF pg. 7)
  28. ^ Navasky, Victor S., Naming Names, pg. 13. Viking Press, 1980.
  29. ^ "Haynes, John Earl; Klehr, Harvey (2006) Early Cold War Spies: the Espionage Trials That Shaped American Politics (Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006), p 41.
  30. ^ Institute of Pacific Relations : hearings before the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee To Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act and Other Internal Security Laws, Subcommittee Investigating the Institute of Pacific Relations, Eighty-Second Congress, first session, part 1. (1951) (Opening statement of Senator Pat McCarran, Chairman). pg. 2-4. Pg. 63 Edward Carter (IPR Sec. General) testifies: "[...] the Senate committee not only took IPR files but took four drawers of my personal files."
  31. ^ Cotton, James (1989) Asian Frontier Nationalism. Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press; pp. 91–95.
  32. ^ ," Time, July 14, 1952.
  33. ^ Within three years, four of the seven indictments were thrown out by the courts and the government subsequently dropped the others. "U.S. Grand Jury Indicts Lattimore, Charges Perjury in Senate Hearing". Harvard Crimson. December 17, 1952. Retrieved October 30, 2018.
  34. ^ "United States v. Lattimore, 112 F. Supp. 507 (D.D.C. 1953)". Justia. May 2, 1953. Retrieved October 30, 2018.
  35. ^ William F. Buckley, Jr., "Why are the Liberals Whitewashing? Owen Lattimore in the Liberal Press", National Review, July 14, 1989.
  36. ^ Haynes & Klehr Early Cold War Spies; pg. 47; US Senate, 82nd Congress, 2nd Session, Committee on the Judiciary, Institute of Pacific Relations, Report No. 2050, pg. 224
  37. ^ Sullivan, William C.; Brown, Bill (1979). The Bureau: My Thirty Years in Hoover's FBI. WW Norton. pp. 45–46. ISBN 9780393012361. Retrieved July 11, 2020.
  38. ^ University of Leeds, List of Honorary Graduates 1904–2014 2015-04-04 at the Wayback Machine
  39. ^ Newman 1992, p. 584.
  40. ^ The conference website includes links on the conference and Owen Lattimore: "Who was Owen Lattimore?"; Digital Books; Articles; Archives; Bibliography: Bookshop; Conference Presentations [1]
  41. ^ Ronald Radosh, "Sidney Hook Was Right, Arthur Schlesinger Is Wrong," The New York Sun, December 16, 2002
  42. ^ Perdue, Peter (2018). "Owen Lattimore: World Historian". Oxford Handbooks Online. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199935369.013.26. ISBN 978-0-19-993536-9.

References and further reading edit

  • Loubere, Nicholas (January 8, 2016). "Inside Out: Owen Lattimore on China". The China Story. Australia: Australian Centere on China in the World. Archived from the original on July 8, 2019. Retrieved July 8, 2019.

External links edit

owen, lattimore, july, 1900, 1989, american, orientalist, writer, influential, scholar, china, central, asia, especially, mongolia, although, never, earned, college, degree, 1930s, editor, pacific, affairs, journal, published, institute, pacific, relations, th. Owen Lattimore July 29 1900 May 31 1989 was an American Orientalist and writer He was an influential scholar of China and Central Asia especially Mongolia Although he never earned a college degree 1 in the 1930s he was editor of Pacific Affairs a journal published by the Institute of Pacific Relations and then taught at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore Maryland from 1938 to 1963 He was director of the Walter Hines Page School of International Relations there from 1939 to 1953 2 During World War II he was an advisor to Chiang Kai shek and the American government and contributed extensively to the public debate on American policy in Asia From 1963 to 1970 Lattimore was the first Professor of Chinese Studies at the University of Leeds in England 2 Owen LattimoreOwen Lattimore around 1945 Born 1900 07 27 July 27 1900Washington D C USDiedMay 31 1989 1989 05 31 aged 88 Providence Rhode Island USOther namesChinese 欧文 拉铁摩尔Occupation s Orientalist writerIn the early post war period of McCarthyism and the Red Scare American wartime China Hands were accused of being agents of the Soviet Union or under the influence of Marxism In 1950 Senator Joseph McCarthy accused Lattimore in particular of being the top Russian espionage agent in the United States 2 The accusations led to years of Congressional hearings that did not substantiate the charge that Lattimore had been a spy Soviet Venona cables decoded during WWII and declassified decades later have not referred to Lattimore as one of the Soviet agents active in the US The hearings did document Lattimore s sympathetic statements about Stalin and the Soviet Union however Although charges of perjury were dismissed the controversy put an end to Lattimore s role as a consultant of the U S State Department and eventually to his career in American academic life He died in 1989 in Providence Rhode Island having resided in his later years in Pawtucket 2 Lattimore s lifetime intellectual project notes one recent scholar who was to develop a scientific model of the way human societies form evolve grow decline mutate and interact with one another along frontiers He eclectically absorbed and often abandoned influential theories of his day that dealt with the great themes of history These included the ecological determinism of Ellsworth Huntington biological racism though only to the extent of seeing characteristics which grew out of ecology the economic geography and location theory and some aspects of Marxist modes of production and stages of history especially through the influence of Karl August Wittfogel The most important and lasting influence however was Arnold J Toynbee and his treatment of the great civilizations as organic wholes which were born matured grew old and died Lattimore s most influential book The Inner Asian Frontiers of China 1940 used these theories to explain the history of East Asia not as the history of China and its influence on its neighbors but as the interaction between two types of civilizations settled farming and pastoral each of which had its role in changing the other 3 Contents 1 Early life 2 Pacific Affairs and the Institute of Pacific Relations 3 World War II 4 Accused of espionage 5 Congressional investigation 6 Legacy 6 1 Theory 7 Publications 8 References 9 References and further reading 10 External linksEarly life edit nbsp A halt on the march Owen Lattimore in late 1926 on his first journey across Inner Asia His diary from this journey on the desert road to Turkestan enabled him to write his first book the start of his career as a scholar of the region Born in the United States Lattimore was raised in Tianjin China where his parents David and Margaret Lattimore were teachers of English at a Chinese university His brother was the poet and classics scholar and translator Richmond Lattimore One of his sisters was author Eleanor Frances Lattimore After being schooled at home by his mother he left China at the age of twelve and attended College Classique Cantonal near Lausanne Switzerland After war broke out in 1914 he was sent to England where he was enrolled at St Bees School Cumbria England 1915 1919 He pursued literary interests especially poetry and briefly converted to Catholicism He did well on the entrance exams for Oxford University but returned to China in 1919 when it turned out that he would not have enough funds for attending university 4 He worked first for a newspaper and then for a British import export related business This gave him the opportunity to travel extensively in China and time to study Chinese with an old fashioned Confucian scholar who His commercial travels also gave him a feel for the realities of life and the economy A turning point was negotiating the passage of a trainload of wool through the lines of two battling warlords early in 1925 an experience which led him the next year to follow the caravans across Inner Mongolia to the end of the line in Xinjiang 5 The managers of his firm saw no advantage in subsidizing his travels but did send him to spend a final year of employment with them in Beijing as government liaison During this year in Beijing before departing on his expedition he met his wife Eleanor Holgate For their honeymoon they planned to travel from Beijing to India he overland she by rail across Siberia a mammoth feat in the first half of the 20th century In the event the plans were disrupted and she had to travel alone by horse drawn sled for 400 miles 640 km in February to find him She described her journey in Turkestan Reunion 1934 he in The Desert Road to Turkestan 1928 and High Tartary 1930 This trip laid the ground for his lifelong interest in all matters related to the Mongols and other peoples of the Silk Road Upon his return to America in 1928 he succeeded in receiving a fellowship from the Social Science Research Council for further travel in Manchuria then for the academic year 1928 1929 as a student at Harvard University He did not however enroll in a doctoral program but returned to China 1930 1933 with fellowships from the Harvard Yenching Institute and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation He was awarded the Patron s Medal by the British Royal Geographical Society in 1942 for his travels in Central Asia 6 In 1943 he was elected to the American Philosophical Society 7 Pacific Affairs and the Institute of Pacific Relations editIn 1934 on the recommendation of treaty port journalist H G E Woodhead Lattimore was appointed editor of Pacific Affairs published by the Institute of Pacific Relations which he edited from Beijing Rather than have bland official statements he made it his policy to make the journal a forum of controversy As he later recalled he was continually in hot water especially with the Japan Council which thought I was too anti imperialist and the Soviet Council which thought that its own anti imperialist line was the only permissible one As explained below others later accused him of motives which were less scholarly than political Lattimore sought articles from a wide range of perspectives and made the journal a forum for new ideas especially from the social sciences and social philosophy Scholars and writers of all persuasions were contributors including Pearl S Buck some Chinese literary figures and dedicated Marxists IPR secretary Edward Carter was eager to solicit the participation of Soviet scholars and insisted that Lattimore meet him in Moscow on his way back to the States Lattimore had never been to the Soviet Union having been denied a visa and felt eager to obtain contributions from Soviet scholars who had a distinguished tradition in Central Asian studies But he was also wary because of the attacks Soviet scholars had made on him Lattimore s scholasticism is similar to Hamlet s madness and for publishing an article by Harold Isaacs who they considered a Trotskyite The Lattimores spent two weeks on the Trans Siberian Railroad with their five year old son before arriving in Moscow for a two week stay toward the end of March 1936 Soviet officials coldly demanded that the IPR and its journal support collective security arrangements against Japan Lattimore responded that Pacific Affairs had the obligation to serve all the national councils even the Japanese and could not take political sides Lattimore s request to visit the Mongolian People s Republic was denied on the grounds that Mongolia now is constantly ready for war and conditions are very unstable And in the end Soviet scholars sent only one article to Pacific Affairs 8 After sojourns in New York and London the Lattimores returned to Beijing in 1937 Owen visited the Communist headquarters at Yan an to act as translator for T A Bisson and Philip Jaffe who were gathering material for Amerasia an activist journal of political commentary There he met Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai He was impressed with their candor but had a less favorable experience on his visit to the party school for national minorities When he spoke to the Mongols in Mongolian his Chinese hosts broke off the session 9 The Lattimores left China in 1938 Owen spent six months in Berkeley California writing a draft of the Inner Asian Frontiers of China and continuing as editor of Pacific Affairs As editor he then made what Robert Newman a sympathetic biographer called the most serious error of his career Lattimore published an article by a pro Soviet writer whom Lattimore did not know praising Stalin s purge trials because they strengthened the Soviet Union for the coming battle against Germany and Japan Lattimore famously stated that the show trials sound to me like democracy Lattimore s misjudgment of the purge trials was undoubtedly influenced by his generally favorable evaluation of Soviet foreign policy which emphasized international cooperation against Japan and Germany and his judgment that the Soviets had been supportive of Mongol autonomy He was nonetheless wrong Newman concluded 10 He also soon wrote prominently against allowing Soviet expansion into China As editor of Pacific Affairs he was expected to maintain a balance but writing in another journal in the spring of 1940 he urged that Above all while we want to get Japan out of China we do not want to let Russia in Nor do we want to drive Japan into the arms of Russia He continued the savagery of the Japanese assault is doing more to spread Communism than the teaching of the Chinese Communists themselves or the influences of Russia It supplies the pressure under which the detonative ideas can work At the same time it destroys Chinese wealth of every kind capital trade revenue from agricultural rent thus weakening that side of Chinese society which is most antagonistic to Communism 11 The Middlesboro Daily News ran an article by Owen Lattimore which reported on Japan s planned offensive into a Hui Muslim region of China in 1938 which predicted that the Japanese would suffer a massive crushing defeat at the hands of the Muslims 12 In 1940 the Japanese were crushed and routed by the Muslims at the Battle of West Suiyuan The Japanese planned to invade Ningxia from Suiyuan in 1939 and create a Hui Muslim puppet state The following year in 1940 the Japanese were defeated militarily by the Kuomintang Muslim General Ma Hongbin who caused the plan to collapse Ma Hongbin s Hui Muslim troops launched further attacks against Japan in the Battle of West Suiyuan 13 14 In Suiyuan 300 Mongol collaborators serving the Japanese were fought off by a single Muslim who held the rank of Major at the Battle of Wulan Obo in 1939 April 15 World War II editFollowing the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941 President Franklin D Roosevelt appointed Lattimore to serve as US advisor to Chinese Nationalist leader Chiang Kai shek for one and a half years Lattimore advocated on behalf of the ethnic minorities in China arguing that China should adopt a cultural autonomy policy based on the Soviet Union s minority policy which he regarded as one of the most successful Soviet policies His advice was mostly disregarded by Chiang s officials as defense secretary Wang Ch ung hui suspected Lattimore of understating Soviet interference in Xinjiang and Outer Mongolia 16 In 1944 Lattimore was placed in charge of the Pacific area for the Office of War Information By this time Lattimore s political activities and associations had been under scrutiny for the last two years by the FBI which recommended Lattimore be put under Custodial Detention in case of National Emergency 17 At President Roosevelt s request he accompanied U S Vice President Henry A Wallace on a mission to Siberia China and Mongolia in 1944 for the U S Office of War Information The trip had been arranged by Lauchlin Currie who recommended to FDR that Lattimore accompany Wallace 18 During this visit which overlapped the D Day landings Wallace and his delegates stayed 25 days in Siberia and were given a tour of the Soviet Union s Magadan Gulag camp at Kolyma In a travelogue for National Geographic Lattimore described what little he saw as a combination of the Hudson s Bay Company and the Tennessee Valley Authority remarking on how strong and well fed the inmates were and ascribing to camp commandant Ivan Nikishov a trained and sensitive interest in art and music and also a deep sense of civic responsibility 19 In a letter written to the New Statesman in 1968 Lattimore justified himself by arguing his role had not been one to snoop on his hosts 20 In contrast camp commander Naftaly Frenkel explained We have to squeeze everything out of a prisoner in the first three months after that we don t need him anymore 21 The system of hard labor and minimal or no food reduced most prisoners to helpless goners dokhodyaga in Russian Conditions varied depending on the state of the country During the 1940s Lattimore came into increasing conflict with another member of the IPR s board Alfred Kohlberg a manufacturer with long experience in the China trade whose visit to China in 1943 convinced him that stories of Chiang Kai shek s corruption were false He accused Lattimore of being hostile to Chiang and too sympathetic towards the Chinese Communist Party In 1944 relations between Kohlberg and Lattimore became so bad that Kohlberg left the IPR and founded a new journal Plain Talk in which he attempted to rebut the claims made in Pacific Affairs By the late 1940s Lattimore had become a particular target of Kohlberg and other members of the China Lobby Kohlberg was later to become an advisor to Senator Joseph McCarthy and it is possible that McCarthy first learned of Lattimore s communist tendencies through Kohlberg 22 Accused of espionage editMeanwhile accusations were made which later became public On 14 December 1948 Alexander Barmine former charge d affaires at the Soviet Embassy in Athens Greece advised Federal Bureau of Investigation agents that Soviet GRU Director Yan Karlovich Berzin had informed him prior to Barmine s 1937 defection that Lattimore was a Soviet agent an allegation Barmine would repeat under oath before the Senate McCarran Committee in 1951 23 24 25 Congressional investigation editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Owen Lattimore news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In March 1950 in executive session of the Tydings Committee Senator Joseph McCarthy accused Lattimore of being the top Soviet agent either in the US in the State Department or both 26 The committee chaired by Senator Millard Tydings was investigating McCarthy s claims of widespread Soviet infiltration of the State Department When the accusation was leaked to the press McCarthy backed off from the charge that Lattimore was a spy but continued the attack in public session of the committee and in speeches Lattimore he said in view of his position of tremendous power at the State Department was the architect of our Far Eastern policy and asked whether Lattimore s aims are American aims or whether they coincide with the aims of Soviet Russia At the time Lattimore was in Kabul Afghanistan on a cultural mission for the United Nations Lattimore dismissed the charges against him as moonshine and hurried back to the United States to testify before the Tydings Committee 27 McCarthy who had no evidence of specific acts of espionage and only weak evidence that Lattimore was a concealed Communist in April 1950 persuaded Louis F Budenz the now anticommunist former editor of the Communist Party organ Daily Worker to testify Budenz had no first hand knowledge of Lattimore s Communist allegiance and had never previously identified him as a Communist in his extensive FBI interviews In addition Budenz had in 1947 told a State Department investigator that he did not recall any instances that suggested that Lattimore was a Communist and had also told his editor at Collier s magazine in 1949 that Lattimore had never acted as a Communist in any way 28 Now however Budenz testified that Lattimore was a secret Communist but not a Soviet agent he was a person of influence who often assisted Soviet foreign policy Budenz said his party superiors had told him that Lattimore s great value lay in the fact that he could bring the emphasis in support of Soviet policy in non Soviet language 29 The majority report of the Tydings committee cleared Lattimore of all charges against him the minority report accepted Budenz s charges In February 1952 Lattimore was called to testify before the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee SISS headed by McCarthy s ally Senator Pat McCarran Before Lattimore was called as witness investigators for the SISS had seized all of the records of the Institute of Pacific Relations IPR 30 The twelve days of testimony were marked by shouting matches which pitted McCarran and McCarthy on one side against Lattimore on the other Lattimore took three days to deliver his opening statement the delays were caused by frequent interruptions as McCarran challenged Lattimore point by point McCarran then used the records from the IPR to ask questions that often taxed Lattimore s memory Budenz again testified but this time claimed that Lattimore was both a Communist and a Soviet agent The subcommittee also summoned scholars Nicholas Poppe a Russian emigre and a scholar of Mongolia and Tibet resisted the committee s invitation to label Lattimore a Communist but found some of his writings superficial and uncritical citation needed The most damaging testimony came from Karl August Wittfogel supported by his colleague from the University of Washington George Taylor Wittfogel a former Communist said that at the time Lattimore edited the journal Pacific Affairs Lattimore knew of his Communist background even though they had not exchanged words on the matter Lattimore had given Wittfogel a knowing smile Lattimore acknowledged that Wittfogel s thought had been tremendously influential but said that if there had been a smile it was a non Communist smile Wittfogel and Taylor charged that Lattimore had done great harm to the free world in disregarding the need to defeat world Communism as a first priority John K Fairbank in his memoirs suggests that Wittfogel may have said this because he had been made to leave Germany for having views unacceptable to the powers that be and he did not want to make the same mistake twice They also asserted that the influence of Marxism on Lattimore was shown by his use of the word feudal Lattimore replied that he did not think that Marxists had a patent on that word 31 In 1952 after 17 months of study and hearing involving 66 witnesses and thousands of documents the McCarran Committee issued its 226 page unanimous final report This report stated that Owen Lattimore was from some time beginning in the 1930s a conscious articulate instrument of the Soviet conspiracy and that on at least five separate matters Lattimore had not told the whole truth One example The evidence shows conclusively that Lattimore knew Frederick V Field to be a Communist that he collaborated with Field after he possessed this knowledge and that he did not tell the truth before the subcommittee about this association with Field 32 On February 16 1952 Lattimore was indicted for perjury on seven counts Six of the counts related to various discrepancies between Lattimore s testimony and the IPR records the seventh accused Lattimore of seeking to deliberately deceive the SISS Lattimore s defenders such as his lawyer Abe Fortas claimed that the discrepancies were caused by McCarran deliberately asking questions about arcane and obscure matters that took place in the 1930s 33 34 Within three years federal judge Luther Youngdahl dismissed the perjury charges on technical grounds 35 United States v Lattimore 127 F Supp 405 D D C 1955 Four of the charges were dismissed as insubstantial and not judicable denying that he was sympathetic to communism was too vague to be fairly answered and the other counts were matters of little concern those for which a jury would be unlikely to convict on matters of political judgment 36 In his book Ordeal by Slander Lattimore gives his own account of these events up until 1950 In his 1979 memoir former FBI agent William C Sullivan said that despite Hoover s relentless efforts the FBI never found anything substantial and that the accusations against Lattimore were ridiculous 37 Legacy edit nbsp Lattimore Amsterdam 1967 nbsp Ti Ch in in Amsterdam the Netherlands 1967 Teach in on China Left to right K S Karol Karol Kewes Bertus Hendriks George Cammelbeeck Stuart Schram amp Owen LattimoreIn 1963 he was recruited from Johns Hopkins University to establish the Department of Chinese Studies now East Asian Studies at the University of Leeds In addition to setting up Chinese Studies he promoted Mongolian Studies building good relations between Leeds and Mongolia and establishing a programme in Mongolian Studies in 1968 He remained at Leeds until he retired as Emeritus Professor in 1970 In 1984 the University of Leeds conferred the degree of Doctor of Letters DLitt on Emeritus Professor Lattimore honoris causa 38 Lattimore had a lifelong dedication to establishing research centres to further the study of Mongolian history and culture In 1979 he became the first Westerner to be awarded the Order of the Polar Star the highest award that the Mongolian state gives to foreigners The State Museum in Ulaanbaatar named a newly discovered dinosaur after him in 1986 39 The American Centre for Mongolian Studies together with the International Association of Mongolian Studies and the National University of Mongolia School of Foreign Service organized a conference entitled Owen Lattimore The Past Present and Future of Inner Asian Studies in Ulaanbaatar Mongolia on August 20 and 21 2008 40 Prominent figures in the anti Communist American political left offered mixed evaluations of Lattimore s legacy in foreign policy Arthur Schlesinger Jr thought that while Lattimore was not a Soviet spy he may have been a fellow traveler who was deeply committed to communist ideals and Sidney Hook similarly proclaimed Latimore a devious and skillful follower of the Communist Party line on Asian affairs 41 Theory edit Historian Peter Perdue wrote that Modern historians anthropologists and archaeologists have revised many of Lattimore s arguments but they still rely on his insights All of the themes addressed by Lattimore continue to inspire world historians today 42 In An Inner Asian Approach to the Historical Geography of China 1947 Lattimore explored the system through which humanity affects the environment and is changed by it and concluded that civilization is molded by its own impact on the environment He lists the following pattern A primitive society pursues some agricultural activities but is aware that it has many limitations Growing and evolving the society begins to change the environment For example depleting its game supply and wild crops it begins to domesticate animals and plants It deforests land to create room for these activities The environment changes offering new opportunities For example it becomes grasslands Society changes in response and reacts to the new opportunities as a new society For example the once nomads build permanent settlements and shift from a hunter gatherer mentality to a farming society culture The reciprocal process continues offering new variations Publications edit1928 The Desert Road to Turkestan London Methuen ISBN 0404038875 1929 reprint Boston Little Brown 1972 reprint with new introduction New York AMS Press 1995 reprint New York Kodansha International 1930 High Tartary Boston Little Brown 1994 reprint New York Kodansha International 1932 Manchuria Cradle of Conflict New York Macmillan Revised in 1935 1933 The Gold tribe Fishskin Tatars of the lower Sungari Menasha WI American Anthropological Association ISBN 9781258092924 1933 The Unknown Frontier of Manchuria Foreign Affairs vol 11 no 2 January 1933 1934 The Mongols of Manchuria Their Tribal Divisions Geographical Distribution Historical Relations With Manchus and Chinese and Present Political Problems dead link New York John Day with maps 1969 reprint New York H Fertig 1934 China and the Barbarians In Joseph Barnes ed Empire in the East New York Doubleday pp 3 36 ISBN 978 0836918632 1970 reprint ISBN 0836918630 1935 On the Wickedness of Being Nomads T ien Hsia Monthly vol 1 no 1 August 1935 pp 47 62 1940 Inner Asian Frontiers of China International Research Series New York American Geographical Society in conjunction with the Secretariat of the Institute of Pacific Relations 1967 reprint Boston Beacon Press 1941 Mongol Journeys New York Doubleday Doran 1941 Stalemate in China Foreign Affairs vol 19 no 3 April 1941 1942 The Fight for Democracy in Asia Foreign Affairs vol 20 no 4 July 1942 1942 China Opens Her Wild West Washington D C National Geographic Society Vol 182 No 3 September 1942 1943 America and Asia Problems of Today s War and the Peace of Tomorrow Claremont Calif Claremont Colleges Foreword by Admiral Harry E Yarnell 1944 The Making of Modern China A Short History with Eleanor Holgate Lattimore New York W W Norton 1944 reprint Washington D C Infantry Journal 1945 Solution in Asia Boston Little Brown ISBN 978 0404106355 1947 An Inner Asian Approach to the Historical Geography of China Geographical Journal UK vol 110 no 4 6 Oct Dec 1947 pp 180 187 JSTOR 1789948 1947 China A Short History with Eleanor Holgate Lattimore New York W W Norton Revised edition 1949 The Situation in Asia Boston Little Brown 1950 Pivot of Asia Sinkiang and the Inner Asian Frontiers of China and Russia Boston Little Brown 1950 Ordeal by Slander Boston Little Brown OCLC 466941 2004 reprint New York Carroll amp Graf Introduction by Blanche Wiessen Cook Preface by David Lattimore 1953 The New Political Geography of Inner Asia Great Britain Geographical Journal vol CXIX no 1 March 1953 Reprint London William Clowes and Sons 1955 Nationalism and Revolution in Mongolia with Sh Nachukdorgi New York Oxford University Press 1962 Nomads and Commissars Mongolia Revisited New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 1258191566 1962 Studies in Frontier History Collected Papers 1928 1958 London Oxford University Press Paris Mouton 1964 From China Looking Outward An Inaugural Lecture Leeds Leeds University Press 1968 Silks Spices and Empire Asia Seen Through the Eyes of Its Discoverers ed with Eleanor Holgate Lattimore New York Delacorte 1973 reprint London Universal Tandem 1970 History and Revolution in China Lund Studentlitteratur 1982 The Diluv Khutagt Memoirs and Autobiography of a Mongol Buddhist Reincarnation in Religion and Revolution Wiesbaden O Harrassowitz ISBN 3447022213 1990 China Memoirs Chiang Kai shek and the War Against Japan Compiled by Fujiko Isono Tokyo University of Tokyo Press ISBN 978 0860084686 Japanese translation available ISBN 978 7309016024 References edit Newman 1992 p 527 a b c d Pace Eric June 1 1989 Owen Lattimore Far East Scholar Accused by McCarthy Dies at 88 The New York Times Retrieved March 11 2008 Rowe 2007 pp 758 760 Newman 1992 pp 5 6 Lattimore Owen 1928 The Desert Road to Turkestan pp 5 8 He euphemistically describes the experience as being sent up country once to try to get hold of some wool List of Past Gold Medal Winners PDF Royal Geographical Society Retrieved August 24 2015 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved April 12 2023 Newman 1992 pp 28 29 Owen Lattimore Studies in Frontier History London 1962 pp 12 20 Newman 40 41 American Responsibilities in the Far East Virginia Quarterly Review 16 Spring 1940 161 174 quoted in Newman pp 44 45 Middlesboro Daily News Google News Archive Search Xiaoyuan Liu 2004 Frontier Passages Ethnopolitics and the Rise of Chinese Communism 1921 1945 Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 4960 2 The China Monthly Review J W Powell 1937 p 320 China Magazine 1940 p 18 Liu Xiaoyuan 2010 Recast All Under Heaven Revolution War Diplomacy and Frontier China in the 20th Century Continuum pp 88 89 FBI Report Owen Lattimore Internal Security R Espionage R September 8 1949 FBI file Owen Lattimore pg 7 PDF pg 12 Six years prior to Barmine s 1948 FBI interview the agency had already compiled a thick security dossier at the onset of World War II on Lattimore recommending that he be put under Custodial Detention in case of National Emergency Roger James Sandilands The Life and Political Economy of Lauchlin Currie Durham Duke University Press 1990 ISBN 0 8223 1030 9 pg 151 Paul Hollander The Survival of the Adversary Culture Social Criticism and Political Escapism in American Society New Brunswick Transaction Publishers 1988 1991 ISBN 1 56000 554 8 pg 180 Is it assumed that a visit of this kind affords an ideal opportunity to snoop on one s hosts He went so far as to imply that after all Nikishov the camp commander could not have been such a tyrant the unspeakable Nikishov must have slipped up in his control since Elinor Lipper survived to write her book He seemed to suggest that being on a goodwill mission and allied to the Soviet Union were good enough explanations for the euphoric accounts he and Wallace produced Paul Hollander The Survival of the Adversary Culture ibid pg 181 Solzhenitsyn A The Gulag Archipelago vol 2 pg 49 John Thomas Ch 2 Kohlberg and the China Lobby The Institute of Pacific Relations esp pp 39 40 FBI Report Owen Lattimore Internal Security R Espionage R September 8 1949 FBI File Owen Lattimore Part 1A p 2 PDF p 7 Absent Minded Professor Time magazine Monday Mar 10 1952 Testimony of Alexander Barmine July 31 1951 U S Congress Senate Committee on the Judiciary Internal Security Subcommittee Institute of Pacific Relations Hearings 82nd Congress First Session Washington Government Printing Office 1951 Part 1 pp 199 200 Evans M Stanton May 30 1997 McCarthyism Waging the Cold War in America Human Events Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved December 16 2009 This was McCarthy s showdown with Prof Lattimore of Johns Hopkins University a long time official of IPR and noted authority on Far Eastern questions Of all the internal security battles that McCarthy fought this was by far the most explosive Quotes from Owen Lattimore Espionage R Ch 29 of M Stanton Evans s Blacklisted by History The untold story of Senator Joe McCarthy and his fight against America s enemies New York Crown Forum 2007 pp 385 398 Further documentation of specifics charges is to be found in FBI Report Owen Lattimore Internal Security R Espionage R September 8 1949 FBI file Owen Lattimore pg 1 PDF p 2 Robert P Newman Owen Lattimore and the Loss of China Berkeley University of California Press 1992 ISBN 0 520 07388 6 pg 52 On December 14 1948 Alexander Barmine former Charge d Affairs at the Soviet Embassy in Athens Greece advised FBI investigators that then GRU Soviet Military Intelligence chief General Berzin informed him prior to his 1937 defection that Owen Lattimore was a Soviet agent FBI Report Owen Lattimore Internal Security R Espionage R September 8 1949 FBI File Owen Lattimore Part 1A pg 2 PDF pg 7 Navasky Victor S Naming Names pg 13 Viking Press 1980 Haynes John Earl Klehr Harvey 2006 Early Cold War Spies the Espionage Trials That Shaped American Politics Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press 2006 p 41 Institute of Pacific Relations hearings before the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee To Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act and Other Internal Security Laws Subcommittee Investigating the Institute of Pacific Relations Eighty Second Congress first session part 1 1951 Opening statement of Senator Pat McCarran Chairman pg 2 4 Pg 63 Edward Carter IPR Sec General testifies the Senate committee not only took IPR files but took four drawers of my personal files Cotton James 1989 Asian Frontier Nationalism Manchester UK Manchester University Press pp 91 95 Report on the IPR Time July 14 1952 Within three years four of the seven indictments were thrown out by the courts and the government subsequently dropped the others U S Grand Jury Indicts Lattimore Charges Perjury in Senate Hearing Harvard Crimson December 17 1952 Retrieved October 30 2018 United States v Lattimore 112 F Supp 507 D D C 1953 Justia May 2 1953 Retrieved October 30 2018 William F Buckley Jr Why are the Liberals Whitewashing Owen Lattimore in the Liberal Press National Review July 14 1989 Haynes amp Klehr Early Cold War Spies pg 47 US Senate 82nd Congress 2nd Session Committee on the Judiciary Institute of Pacific Relations Report No 2050 pg 224 Sullivan William C Brown Bill 1979 The Bureau My Thirty Years in Hoover s FBI WW Norton pp 45 46 ISBN 9780393012361 Retrieved July 11 2020 University of Leeds List of Honorary Graduates 1904 2014 Archived 2015 04 04 at the Wayback Machine Newman 1992 p 584 The conference website includes links on the conference and Owen Lattimore Who was Owen Lattimore Digital Books Articles Archives Bibliography Bookshop Conference Presentations 1 Ronald Radosh Sidney Hook Was Right Arthur Schlesinger Is Wrong The New York Sun December 16 2002 Perdue Peter 2018 Owen Lattimore World Historian Oxford Handbooks Online doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199935369 013 26 ISBN 978 0 19 993536 9 References and further reading editBuck David 1999 Owen Lattimore In Garraty John A Carnes Mark C eds American National Biography New York Oxford University Press pp 248 250 OCLC 39182280 Cotton James 1989 Asian Frontier Nationalism Owen Lattimore and the American Policy Debate Atlantic Highlands NJ Humanities Press International ISBN 0391036513 Evans M Stanton 2007 Chapter 29 Owen Lattimore Blacklisted by History The Untold Story of Senator Joe McCarthy and His Fight against America s Enemies New York Crown Forum ISBN 978 1400081059 Flynn John Thomas 1953 The Lattimore Story New York Devin Adair Publishing Company Also available at Hathi Trust Fried Richard 1990 Nightmare in Red The McCarthy Era in Perspective New York amp Toronto Oxford University Press ISBN 019504360X Klingaman William 1996 Encyclopedia of the McCarthy Era New York Facts on File ISBN 0816030979 Loubere Nicholas January 8 2016 Inside Out Owen Lattimore on China The China Story Australia Australian Centere on China in the World Archived from the original on July 8 2019 Retrieved July 8 2019 Newman Robert P 1992 Owen Lattimore and the Loss of China California University of California Press ISBN 978 0520073883 Full text online Oshinsky David 1983 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy New York Free Press London Collier Macmillan ISBN 0029234905 Rowe William T 2007 Owen Lattimore Asia and Comparative History Journal of Asian Studies Ann Arbor MI Association for Asian Studies 66 3 759 786 doi 10 1017 S0021911807000952 S2CID 163037081 Schrecker Ellen 1986 No Ivory Tower McCarthyism and the Universities New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0195035577 Schrecker Ellen 1998 Many Are the Crimes McCarthyism in America Boston amp London Little Brown ISBN 0316774707 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Owen Lattimore FBI reports from the espionage investigation of Lattimore 5161 pages United States vs Lattimore Owen Lattimore interview by Caroline Humphrey filmed by Alan Macfarlane May 21 1983 via University of Cambridge Owen Lattimore A Register of His Papers in the Library of Congress 1998 American Center for Mongolian Studies Library Archived April 1 2016 at the Wayback Machine Brief biography of Lattimore with links to books by or about him and relevant websites The Papers of Owen Lattimore at Dartmouth College Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Owen Lattimore amp oldid 1189950478, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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