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January 1998

Telling lies about history: “The Fifties” on television

by Hilton Kramer

Criticism, of course, cannot prevent lies from being told. But it does make it its business to see that they do not establish themselves as truth.
—George Watson, The Literary Critics

It is a melancholy task to return to the subject of David Halberstam’s book on The Fifties,[1] first published to much misguided acclaim nearly five years ago and lately turned into a lengthy television series on the so-called History Channel that is an even worse travesty of the period than the author’s original text. The book itself, running to some eight hundred pages of recycled myths, clichés, and caricatures drawn from the received wisdom of the Left-liberal media, is a monstrous compendium of misinformation about one of the most admirable epochs in American history. In the History Channel series this compendium of misinformation is, with a single exception—the segment on the Civil Rights movement in the S ...

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Hilton Kramer is the editor and publisher of The New Criterion, which he founded with the late Samuel Lipman in 1982
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 16 January 1998, on page 12
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