by WilliamD.Rubinstein (Author)
For many intelligent people, the stuff of history does not consist of the kind of dry-as-dust investigations of diplomatic, economic, or political history that most university historians research and write about, but the famous topics of history's mysteries - who was Jack the Ripper? Was there a conspiracy to kill President Kennedy? Did Richard III murder the Princes in the Tower? What are the mysteries of the ancient Pyramids?
Not only have a great many books and articles been written on these and similar topics by so-called amateur historians, but they have generated societies, conferences, newsletters, and television programmes. Many people who are not academic historians take a keen interest in these topics, and have in some cases made themselves real experts on them, with interesting theories of their own.
Despite all of this, however, these topics are virtually ignored by academic historians and can be treated with contempt. In Shadow Pasts, William D. Rubinstein a well-known and widely published history professor, examines seven of the most famous and interesting topics which have been discussed, debated, examined, and written about by amateur historians. Each of these mysteries and the theories surrounding them are examined in detail, with Professor Rubinstein presenting his own original and sometimes surprising conclusions about what really happened.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 208
Edition: 1
Publisher: Longman Explores the obsession of amateur historians and their conspiracy theories about some of history's most fascinating and enduring mysteries.
Published: 01 Nov 2007
ISBN 10: 0582505976
ISBN 13: 9780582505971
Book Overview:
'Professor Rubinstein has done amateur historians a service in this book by bringing the work they do to a wider reading public.'
Paul Begg author of Jack the Ripper: The Definitive History (2005) and Mary Celeste: The Greatest Mystery of the Sea (2007).
Bill Rubinstein is a Professor at Aberystwyth. He is well known as a controversial author in historical circles. His best selling books include The Truth Will Out, which presents a new candidate for The Shakespeare Authorship Debate and The Myth of Rescue which refuted the idea that more Jews could have been saved by the Allies from the Holocaust.