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'The chief trouble with the book
is that it is not always clear just where the anthologising ends and where the
joint authorial writing begins.'
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'This regrettable dual performance seems likely to cast a
dark shadow over the authenticity of other published work by Mr Binni and Mr
Domenichelli.'
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Parallel minds or inverted comma
dropping and lifting?
JUST Book
Reviews explores the perilous bounds between anthologising and original
writing
By Domenico Pacitti, JBR
Editor
History and Anthology of English
Literature by Francesco Binni and Mario Domenichelli. Second revised & corrected
edition (3rd reprinting), published in 1987 (1st edition 1986) by Editori
Laterza, Bari, 881 pages, �20, ISBN: 88 421 0170 2.
Francesco Binni and Mario
Domenichelli say that their book is aimed at providing Italian upper schools
with a selection of the most significant passages of English literature placed
within a historical context. The basic plan of the book, which runs from the
Anglo-Saxons to the 1970s, is to provide a historical background to each era
followed by short samples of mainly literary texts by the salient artists of the
period. The literary texts are annotated in Italian and there are also some
exercises supplied by a native English speaker who is duly credited for her
work.
The chief trouble with the book
is that it is not always clear just where the anthologising ends and where the
joint authorial writing begins. The historical passages, which at times appear
to have a familiar ring, display a highly idiosyncratic style and a command of
written English not only far beyond the known capabilities of Italian academics
but also beyond the reach of all but the most fluent native English writers.
Since the book's preface contains no statement of any division of their work, Mr
Binni and Mr Domenichelli must together be held responsible for the whole.
Moreover, the volume under examination is a revised and corrected edition of an
earlier work.
Compare the following two
sample passages from Messrs Binni and Domenichelli with two parallel passages
from the standard work by David Thomson, England in the Twentieth Century
(Vol. 9 in The Pelican History of England, London). The first edition of
Thomson's book appeared in 1950 and there have since been later editions. We
looked at the 1981 edition but it would be very interesting to compare also the
1950 edition for possible variations and further light on the Binni-Domenichelli
methodology.
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Binni & Domenichelli:
History & Anthology (1986) |
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David Thomson: England in
the Twentieth Century (1981) |
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The stubborn
refusal of Liberals and Conservatives alike to contemplate yielding to the
increasingly militant demands for women's right to vote in parliamentary
elections (voiced by the so-called suffragettes from 1905) drove women to
violent riots all over the country. The question of Home Rule for Ireland
(the establishment of a parliament in Dublin responsible for domestic
affairs, greatly opposed by Protestant Ulster), a burning issue for the
past generation, drove both major parties into postures of violent
intransigence. By 1914, with Ireland on the verge of civil war, the
Liberals were ready to coerce Ulster into submission in order to grant the
Irish Home Rule." (Binni & Domenichelli, page 655) |
<==> |
The stubborn
refusal of Liberals and Conservatives alike to contemplate yielding to the
demands of the suffragettes for women's right to vote in parliamentary
elections (it already existed in local elections) drove the women to
violence and excess. The question of Home Rule for Ireland, a live issue
for the past generation, drove both major parties into postures of violent
intransigence. By 1914, the Liberals were ready to coerce Ulster into
submission in order to grant the Irish Home Rule." (Thomson, page 32) |
|
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Britain declared
war on Germany on 4 August 1914. Formally, she did so because Germany had
violated a joint treaty obligation to respect the neutrality of Belgium.
In fact, she did so because it was her traditional defence strategy to
make sure that the Low Countries were not dominated by a hostile Power,
because her agreements with France made it morally necessary to stand by
France in case of general war and because deep-rooted fear of German naval
power impelled her to avoid isolation in a world of international fears
and tensions. (Binni & Domenichelli, page 680) |
<==> |
Britain declared
war on Germany on 4 August 1914. She did so formally because Germany had
violated a joint treaty obligation to respect the neutrality of Belgium.
She did so substantially for several other reasons as well: because it was
her traditional defence strategy to make sure that the Low Countries were
not dominated by a hostile Power, because the naval agreements of 1912
with France made it morally necessary to stand by France in case of
general war, because deep-rooted fear of German naval power impelled her
to avoid isolation in a world of international fears and tensions. (Thomson,
page 34) |
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It might be worth taking a
closer look at this parallel, sentence by sentence, with a view to understanding
the minimal differences in historical perspective of the three parallel minds at
work.
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Binni & Domenichelli:
History & Anthology (1986) - 1 |
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David Thomson: England in
the Twentieth Century (1981) - 1 |
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The stubborn
refusal of Liberals and Conservatives alike to contemplate yielding to the
increasingly militant demands for women's right to vote in parliamentary
elections (voiced by the so-called suffragettes from 1905) drove women to
violent riots all over the country. (Binni & Domenichelli) |
<==> |
The stubborn
refusal of Liberals and Conservatives alike to contemplate yielding to the
demands of the suffragettes for women's right to vote in parliamentary
elections (it already existed in local elections) drove the women to
violence and excess. (Thomson) |
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Notice that for Binni & Domenichelli the
suffragettes' demands are "increasingly militant" while for Thomson they were
just plain demands. Could it be that Thomson missed something here that Binni &
Domenichelli with a parallel but more penetrating vision managed to capture?
Oddly enough, Binni & Domenichelli see fit to introduce a parenthesis at exactly
the same point in the sentence as Thomson but the information contained is
curiously different. Unlike Thomson, Binni & Domenichelli speak simply of "demands
for women's right to vote" whereas Thomson sees the necessity to specify that
the demands were "of the suffragettes". However, to compensate, Binni &
Domenichelli specify the suffragettes within their parenthesis, thus evening out
the balance. On Thomson's account, "the women" were simply "driven to violence
and access". But Binni & Domenichelli dispense with the definite article,
implying perhaps a different perspective on the nature of the riots. In fact,
Binni & Domenichelli go on to stress the widespread geographical aspect of the
riots with the expression "all over the country".
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Binni & Domenichelli:
History & Anthology (1986) - 2 |
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David Thomson: England in
the Twentieth Century (1981) - 2 |
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The question of
Home Rule for Ireland (the establishment of a parliament in Dublin
responsible for domestic affairs, greatly opposed by Protestant Ulster), a
burning issue for the past generation, drove both major parties into
postures of violent intransigence. (Binni & Domenichelli) |
<==> |
The question of
Home Rule for Ireland, a live issue for the past generation, drove both
major parties into postures of violent intransigence. (Thomson)
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Sentence 2 again reveals a quite remarkable
convergence, both in terms of thought and linguistic expression, between Binni &
Domenichelli and Thomson. A significant difference is that Binni & Domenichelli
introduce a parenthesis to spell out what exactly is meant by "Home Rule for
Ireland" while Thomson appears to take this for granted. Thomson sees the issue,
perhaps more objectively, as "live" whereas Binni & Domenichelli judge it to be
"burning", which may reflect a greater sense of emotional involvement on their
part in respect of Thomson. However, with all due respect for the parallel minds
syndrome, it is surely hardly imaginable that Binni & Domenichelli could
independently have hit upon the very same expression as Thomson: "drove both
major parties into postures of violent intransigence".
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Binni & Domenichelli:
History & Anthology (1986) - 3 |
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David Thomson: England in
the Twentieth Century (1981) - 3 |
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By 1914, with
Ireland on the verge of civil war, the Liberals were ready to coerce Ulster
into submission in order to grant the Irish Home Rule. (Binni & Domenichelli) |
<==> |
By 1914, the
Liberals were ready to coerce Ulster into submission in order to grant the
Irish Home Rule. (Thomson) |
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The two versions of sentence 3 are distinguished
solely by Binni & Domenichelli's phrase, "with Ireland on the verge of civil
war". By now even the most ardent advocates of the parallel minds hypothesis
must find it hard to believe that Mr Binni and Mr Domenichelli have
independently opted once again for the very same wording as Thomson: "to coerce
Ulster into submission in order to grant the Irish Home Rule".
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Binni & Domenichelli:
History & Anthology (1986) - 4 |
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David Thomson: England in
the Twentieth Century (1981)- 4 |
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Britain declared
war on Germany on 4 August 1914. (Binni & Domenichelli) |
<==> |
Britain declared
war on Germany on 4 August 1914. (Thomson) |
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There is obviously not a lot to say about
sentence 4. Messrs Binni and Domenichelli can surely not have been expected to
alter the date of the British declaration of war purely in order to avoid
accusations of unwarranted convergence or worse. On the hand, it is also true
that the next two sentences are also remarkably similar.
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Binni & Domenichelli:
History & Anthology (1986) - 5 |
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David Thomson: England in
the Twentieth Century (1981)- 5 |
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Formally, she did
so because Germany had violated a joint treaty obligation to respect the
neutrality of Belgium. (Binni & Domenichelli) |
<==> |
She did so formally
because Germany had violated a joint treaty obligation to respect the
neutrality of Belgium. ( Thomson) |
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Comparison of the two versions of sentence 5
raises the question whether Messrs Binni & Domenichelli may have consciously
decided to use the Thomson sentence for some reason but to alter the position of
the word "formally" in the interests of greater clarity and correctness. Perhaps
Binni & Domenichelli want to stress that saying that someone has done something
formally is different from saying that, formally, someone has done something.
The idiomatic use of the feminine pronoun "she" to refer to Britain does seem
strikingly similar and is not exactly what one might have expected from an
Italian speaker. One explanation is that Messrs Binni & Domenichelli were
subconsciously guided by the Italian term "Gran Bretagna" (Great Britain) which
is, like the suffragettes, feminine gender.
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Binni & Domenichelli:
History & Anthology (1986) - 6 |
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David Thomson: England in
the Twentieth Century (1981) - 6 |
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In fact, she did so
because it was her traditional defence strategy to make sure that the Low
Countries were not dominated by a hostile Power, because her agreements with
France made it morally necessary to stand by France in case of general war
and because deep-rooted fear of German naval power impelled her to avoid
isolation in a world of international fears and tensions. (Binni &
Domenichelli) |
<==> |
She did so
substantially for several other reasons as well: because it was her
traditional defence strategy to make sure that the Low Countries were not
dominated by a hostile Power, because the naval agreements of 1912 with
France made it morally necessary to stand by France in case of general war,
because deep-rooted fear of German naval power impelled her to avoid
isolation in a world of international fears and tensions. (Thomson) |
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Sentence 6 marks the continued use of feminine
pronouns and adjectives to refer to Britain both by Domenichelli & Binni and by
Thomson with very little variation indeed. The two sentences are, in fact, so
similar here that one cannot help wondering whether all the similarities in the
previous five sentences, together with the remarkable similarities of ordering
and sequence, may not in fact be pure coincidence after all.
Now, it might be argued in defence of Messrs
Binni and Domenichelli that coincidence knows no limits and that an infinite
number of monkeys randomly hitting the keys of an infinite number of typewriters
over an infinite period of time would eventually produce the complete works of
Shakespeare. But does this mean that a limited number of humans (who are nor
monkeys) with a limited number of typewriters could, in a limited period of
time, unconsciously reproduce parts of the work of a British historian? Even
though Mr Binni's and Mr Domenichelli's writing may appear at times to come
rather close to aping, this question seems unanswerable.
Pending a rigorous formulation of a parallel
minds theory that explicitly incorporates the phenomenon of mathematical and
linguistic coincidence, this regrettable dual performance seems likely to cast a
dark shadow over the authenticity of other published work by Mr Binni and Mr
Domenichelli as regards both their joint and individual publications.
On this performance, the question also arises
whether this book should perhaps be removed from school and university
syllabuses in view of its potentially harmful effects on malleable young minds
which may be unaware of the universal conventions employed among bona fide
academics throughout the world of correctly and honestly acknowledging all cited
sources. Even if this history and anthology of English literature had been more
appropriately retitled an anthology of English history and literature, it would
still have required the correct insertion of inverted commas.
Francesco
Binni and Mario Domenichelli hold senior posts in English literature at the
University of Florence's faculty of letters and philosophy.
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Domenico Pacitti is Editor of JUST
Book Reviews. He
has written several
hundred articles against corruption in Italy. He has taught
philosophy, linguistics and Chinese at universities in the UK and Italy
and currently teaches English language and American literature at the
University of Pisa. |
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Note: This
review was first published by JUST Book Reviews on February 29 2004.
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