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Tuesday, February 20, 2007
Paul Greenberg :: Townhall.com Columnist
In praise of plagiarism
by Paul Greenberg
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Now and then an old friend goes through a column of mine, highlights a few phrases, and compliments me on what he calls my "gifted plagiarism." It seems he's picked out various phrases I've borrowed from my betters - and he's kind enough to mention only some of them.

My friend calls it plagiarism; I call it literary allusion. After all, when Cervantes or Shakespeare has said it better, why say it worse?

When caught red-handed with my hands on somebody else's words, the best defense I can frame is, of course, in somebody else's words. Namely, Tom Lehrer's. Specifically, his ditty in honor of the great mathematician Lobachevsky.

For the full effect, Professor Lehrer's aria needs to be sung off-key after a couple of cold ones to the accompaniment of a tinny piano and a loud, vigorous Hey! at the end of each chorus, complete with a stage Russian accent:

"I am never forget the day I first meet the great Lobachevsky. In one word he told me secret of success in mathematics: Plagiarize!"

And on to the verse: "Plagiarize! / Let no one else's work evade your eyes, / Remember why the good Lord made your eyes, / So don't shade your eyes, / But plagiarize, plagiarize, plagiarize - / Only be sure always to call it, please . . . Research!" Hey!

In these computerized times, that kind of research no longer takes the premeditation it did when one had to laboriously type out a quotation. Now, quick, without thinking, we press a key or two and, bingo, somebody else's wisdom can appear under our name.

If and when the slip is noticed, always call it Š Accidental! ("Gosh, I must have copied that in my research and forgotten it wasn't mine.") See the excuses offered by historians Doris Kearns Goodwin and the late, sainted Stephen Ambrose, both of whom were caught sounding entirely too much like someone else.

Harvard Law School is well represented in these distinguished ranks with Lawrence Tribe and Charles J. Ogletree, professors whose words bore a striking similarity to those written by others. The trend starts early at Harvard: An undergraduate there turned out a novel that contained all-too-familiar passages - and got a $500,000 advance for it.

Now a federal judge, the prolific Richard A. Posner, would simplify matters by exempting lawyers and judges from charges of plagiarism. What, not newspaper columnists?

After all, some language is so irresistible that some of us come to think of it as our own. We can't help ourselves. It's the verbal form of kleptomania, this compulsion to appropriate others' clevernesses.

Joe Biden, the senator from Delaware, was once so impressed by some Brit's eloquent speech that he adopted it as his own.

It's understandable why others' good stories and perfect phrases should tempt us to borrow them. What's not understandable is why people would steal bad prose. It's not the theft that troubles in such cases, but the poor taste of the thief.

The late Molly Ivins is my exemplar in these matters. When she was caught sounding word-for-word like Florence King - accidentally, of course - let it be said for Miss Molly that she had the taste to copy from the very best. Originality is a much overrated virtue compared to good taste in collecting.

To quote a once celebrated Southern author, James Branch Cabell, "very few sane architects commence an edifice by planting and rearing the oaks which are to compose its beams and stanchions. You take over all such supplies ready hewn, and choose by preference time-seasoned timber."

Hear, hear! I wish I'd said that. And someday I just might.

It's not imitation but plagiarism that is the highest form of flattery. But always call it Research!

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How can you resist plagarism
when most people can't read anything more difficult than People Magazine and won't recognize the material anyway? Odds are pretty good unless the author herself spots the plagarism, er, "borrowing", that it will go totally unremarked.

I don't know how many times I have quoted something from "Chief Modern Poets of England and America" which for some reason I seem to have memorized, only to have some admiring hearer ask, "Did you make that up?" The latest was that famous and trenchant quote "Thus Malt does more than Milton can/to justify God's ways to Man." Yes, it was apt. No I did not make it up. I wish I had. And you know what, in a world where nobody reads anymore, I might as well say that I did. Who's going to know the difference?

Thank God for Tom Lehrer!
- - thought most people had forgotten him. His "Be Prepared" (the Boy Scout Marching Song) was an equally fine classic.
And then there was Milton Berle's quotation about someone else's joke -- that you'll be hearing it out of his mouth as he kinda "borrows" it?
Thanks. Good obswervations.
Also, as an aside -- for that guy above, sorry, but I wouldn't trust anything Joe Biden (nor 94.6% of all other politicians) say/said...

I like plagiarism.
It. Wasn't. Plagarism.How can you resist plagarism
when most people can't read anything more difficult than People Magazine and won't recognize the material anyway?Thank God for Tom Lehrer!
- - thought most people had forgotten him.


Tamalak
You addressed your comment about doing ones homework to Jesus Christ, rather than the author, Mr. Greenberg. Of course, that could be attributed to their shared ethnicity?

Lest we forget BoreGore
As BoreGore plagiarised from Farley Mowat, and now gets an honourary (it should now be called "dishonourary", as giving it to someone like BoreGore is a dishonour to those who worked their ways to a real degree) degree from UMN for "his work in climatology"?

http://www.mndaily.com/algore.htm

(add another nail in MN's coffin after they elected Ellison to Congress)


the MLK plagiarism page
The Martin Luther King Jr. Plagiarism page

In response to the University of Nebraska's proposal to make Martin Luther King's birthday an official University holiday, we here present the MLK plagiarism page, on which we'll be documenting MLK's long career of misrepresenting other writers' work as his own.

The page is still under construction. When it is complete, it will compare in detail excerpts of King's works with those of previous authors, showing how King lifted sentences, phrases and entire paragraphs from texts like Paul Ramsey's 'Basic Christian Ethics' (sheesh!). It will show how whole chunks of MLK's doctoral thesis were copied from the thesis of another student, and from the works of eminent theologians. It will show how his early graduate and even undergraduate student papers were filched, and how King's plagiarism extended into his later career, and the works he wrote after he became famous.

A chronology of the discovery of King's plagiarism
King's plagiarized works
1/Student essays
2/Dissertation
3Books
4/Sermons, speeches and miscellania
http://chem-gharbison.unl.edu/mlk/plagiarism.html
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