The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary by Simon Winchester

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(Paperback)

  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Pub. Date: July 2005
  • ISBN-13: 9780060839789
  • Sales Rank: 11,455
  • 288pp
  • Series: P.S.
 
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Synopsis

Part homage to the greatest reference work of all time, the Oxford English Dictionary, part mystery, part intellectual history of Victorian England, The Professor and the Madman tells the parallel stories of the dictionary's genius editor and one of his most prolific contributors, an insane American doctor committed to an asylum for murder.

Globe and Mail

...It is one of the strengths of this book that it will, by its very sensationalism, attract and inform readers who might never normally lay down cold hard cash for the 'fascinating story of the history of English lexicography'....For those who know little of lexicography, this book is an entertaining, though not wholly reliable, introduction to the subject, particularly enlightening for those who labour under the delusion that the OED 's role is to prescribe what is 'proper' and 'improper' English.

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Biography

Journalist Simon Winchester had already published a list of travel and historical titles before a footnote in a book about dictionary-making led him to his tale of a prolific contributor to the gargantuan Oxford English Dictionary. That book, The Professor and the Madman, became a surprise hit -- and made Winchester a leading practitioner of what The New York Times calls “cocktail-party science.”

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Customer Reviews

Winchester Missed Some Significant Informationby Anonymous

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December 28, 2007: The subject of Winchester?s book is Sir James A. H. Murray, editor of the 'Oxford English Dictionary,' and Dr. William C. Minor, the American volunteer who worked on the 'O.E.D.' for 20 years while an inmate in the Broadmoor Lunatic Asylum for the criminally insane. I am a New York playwright who, in 1995, completed a full-length drama focusing James Murray and William Minor, called 'The Dictionary,' and whose help Mr. Winchester sought when he was first considering writing his book. 'Winchester mentions me in his Acknowledgments.' There is a serious problem with Winchester?s book. Mark Rozzo characterizes it perfectly in his 'Washington Post' review of 'The Professor and the Madman': '. . . we?re never sure when Winchester is cleaving to facts and when he is fictionalizing.' Winchester also missed some significant information in his book. Moreover, there are a number of inaccuracies in 'The Professor and the Madman.' About Minor?s death Winchester writes, incorrectly, 'There were no obituaries.' An obituary was published in 1921 in 'Yale University Obituary Record of Graduates Deceased During the Year Ending July 1, 1920.' From this obituary one learns that Minor was born in the East Indies that he entered the Yale School of Medicine in 1861 and was graduated in 1863 that he was incarcerated at Broadmoor, transferred to St. Elizabeth?s in the U.S., and later transferred from St. Elizabeth?s to The Retreat, in Hartford, where he died on March 26, 1920. The Yale obituary also mentions his brother Alfred. Winchester refers to the lawyer who defended Minor in his murder trial, but does not mention the lawyer?s name. My research suggests that the person who defended Minor is the same one who defended Oscar Wilde. The man?s name is Edward Clarke. I am surprised that Winchester did not seize upon this possibility. Winchester theorizes that Minor?s clinically paranoid dread of the Irish, and of the Fenians in particular, was the result of his experience as a Union Army Surgeon with Irish troops during the Civil War. Winchester neglects the fact that during the years that Minor was stationed in New York 'on Governors Island' the Fenians were, in fact, his real enemy. Minor lived in New York during 1867 and 1868, when the local papers frequently covered events pertaining to the revolutionary movement in Ireland and to activities of the Irish in New York. In March of 1867 the Irish cause held the front page of just about every newspaper every day. It was during the week of March 18 that the expectation of a Fenian attack on Canada, still part of the British Empire at that time, appeared in at least three separate articles in three different papers. News of U.S. troops being moved from New York to the border to thwart the offensive also made headlines. That Minor would have been selected to assist in the battlefield action against the Fenians is not unlikely. This attack never took place however, less than a year before, the Fenians had staged an assault on Canada from New York State. Eight hundred Irishmen crossed the Niagara River and captured Fort Erie. They were subsequently defeated by U.S. troops, and about 700 Fenians were arrested. Minor would have known of this. Winchester mentions the American vice-consul-general and quotes a letter of his to the Medical Superintendent of Broadmoor, but neglects to cite his name, which is Joshua Nunn. Winchester also failed to locate a series of twenty-two letters by Joshua Nunn, an important...

The Surgeon of Crawthorneby Anonymous

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May 19, 2005: Simon Winchester?s The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary is a thought- provoking, intelligent and haunting tale of the creation of the Oxford English Dictionary (OED). The story focuses on James Murray and Dr. W. C. Minor and their twenty year relationship, most of which took place through their correspondence with one another. Only educated until the age of fourteen, English born James Murray?s love of words drove him to become a self-taught master of linguistics. Rising through the ranks of academia, he was given the task of overseeing the making of the OED. Knowing that cataloging every word which had ever existed in the English language would be an impossible undertaking for one man, he solicited volunteers from both England and America. They were to find words, of any sort, and supply a quotation using that word, preferably from the oldest work they had at hand. An American who was a military surgeon in the Civil War soon responded. Dr. W.C. Minor however did not fill out the preprinted return slips supplied my Murray; he had his own meticulously crafted and much more efficient system. He would take a book from his vast collection, and then fold several sheets of paper into a booklet. He would than list words in alphabetical order, recording the page number that he found it on. He would repeat the process for each subsequent book. He would then write to Murray, and inquire what letter the dictionary was working and what letters in particular were needed. He would then return to his booklets, and supply those words. In the end Minor turned out to be an invaluable asset to the OED project, contributing serveral thousands of words that would make their way into the great dictionary. Murray would often request to meet with Minor, but Minor would always refuse. After some twenty years, Minor accepted, and Murray found out that the doctor was a prisoner in on of England?s harshest asylums from the criminally insane. His severe delusions, drihaving driven him to murder. Winchester delves into Minor?s madness and tries to shed some light on exactly what drove him insane. He never excuses his action, but speaks about him in a manner that won?t allow the reader not to view him sympathetically. James Murray is no less in the spotlight. Winchester shows how this fairly uneducated man, turned his passion of words into being the editor-in-chief of the greatest dictionary put to paper. Murray is a kind and caring man, as even once he learns of Dr. Minor?s insanity, the two stay close friends. Other historical character make appearances. Murray was an acquaintance of Alexander Graham Bell?s father. When an aging Dr. Minor is allowed to return to the United States (some forty years after his capture), it is Winston Churchill (very young and not yet prime minister) who signs the order approving Minor to be turned over to his brother and put into an asylum in Washington, DC. Each chapter begins with the definition of word pertinent to the bit of story told therein, taking directly from the OED, making the Oxford English Dictionary just as much one of the book?s protagonists (and yes, as The Madman and the Professor and the OED will tell you, ?protagonist? can in fact be pluralized) as Murray and Minor. The most clever of these is the chapter entitled ?Masturbate,? defined as ?the practice of self abuse.? It?s in this chapter that we learn a 77 year-old Minor decides...


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