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David Aaronovitch

ByDavid Aaronovitch, David Aaronovitch

Opinion

A Rose is a Rose is a Rose is etc

A 'London Review of Books' article promising the unexpected will, to its readers, deliver quite the opposite

June 17, 2010 12:52
2 min read

On the second leg of a train trip to Kiev, I began to think on the proposition that where you say something matters as much, if not more than, what you say.

The provocateuse was Professor Jacqueline Rose, whose very, very long article in the London Review of Books I was reading. Her piece - "J'accuse. Dreyfus in our times" - purports to examine what might be learned from the late 19th-century case of the Jewish officer in the French army, falsely convicted of treason and transported, and the subsequent scandal.

Rose identified the Dreyfus affair as involving the struggle for justice, the corruption of state and army, the "outpouring of antisemitism" and the fate of the Jews. And then tantalised her readers by promising that "the lessons I draw… may not --- by the end --- be those most obviously expected." Expected by the LRB reader, presumably.

What, then, might so surprise the person who has leafed through a dozen round-robins from Jews for Justice for Palestinians; Tariq Ali reiterating his "visceral hatred" for Tony Blair; others defending the Sudanese government from the charge of genocide; and a gazillion words marking the USA and Israel as rogue nations?