- James J. Martin
James J. Martin (
September 18 ,1916 –April 4 ,2004 ) was an Americanhistorian . He was educated at theUniversity of New Hampshire and theUniversity of Michigan , earning a Ph.D. in history in 1949.He is best known for his work on the history of American individualist anarchism, "Men Against the State", first published in 1953. His 1964 book "American Liberalism and World Politics, 1931-1941" is also well known.
He was a close associate of historian
Harry Elmer Barnes . Martin's own views werelibertarian andindividualist anarchist . He was also anegoist influenced byMax Stirner , and rejected thenatural rights views held by some other libertarians. His work was praised by liberal historianWilliam Appleman Williams , libertarian theoristMurray Rothbard , and others. After a teaching career at several universities, he took a job teaching atRobert LeFevre 's Rampart College, assuming it would be a full-time job. This was not the case as Rampart College was not yet really a college but only a series of workshop/lectures on libertarian political economy. This led to an eventual falling out between Martin and LeFevre when Rampart College went out of business three years after Martin was hired, with Martin charging LeFevre with a breach of his five year contract.In 1968 after Rampart College folded, Martin founded the small Ralph Myles Publishing, which reprinted "Men Against the State" and brought a series of classic
anarchist writings back into print, most notably "No Treason: The Constitution of No Authority" byLysander Spooner . Martin also was the author of books onanti-war subjects including "Revisionist Viewpoints", a collection of anti-World War II essays, and "An American Adventure in Bookburning", a history ofcensorship in the United States during World War I.Starting in 1979 Martin began to associate with the
Institute for Historical Review , aHolocaust denial group, severely undercutting, in the minds of some, his previous credibility as a historian. One of his last books was "The Man Who Invented Genocide: The Public Career and Consequences of Raphael Lemkin" published in 1984.External links
* [http://www.antiwar.com/orig/riggenbach.php?articleid=2593 James J. Martin, 1916 – 2004] by
Jeff Riggenbach ,Antiwar.com
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