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- <text id=93TT1759>
- <title>
- May 24, 1993: "He Said," She Said
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 24, 1993 Kids, Sex & Values
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 58
- "He Said," She Said
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Jeffrey Masson's libel suit against Janet Malcolm goes to trial.
- Can there be a real winner?
- </p>
- <p>By WILLIAM A. HENRY III
- </p>
- <p> Reported by Kathryn Jackson Fallon/New York and David S.
- Jackson/San Francisco
- </p>
- <p> No matter the official outcome, in most libel suits everyone
- loses. The aggrieved plaintiff seeking to restore his reputation
- winds up giving far wider, more enduring publicity to the very
- allegations he wants to suppress. The accused journalist may
- win in court--for First Amendment reasons, the rules are tilted
- in favor of the press--but is less than certain of being vindicated.
- Often, a story that provokes a suit is legally defensible yet
- morally tainted by bias, animus or procedural lapses; the trial
- turns into a lesson in press ethics, with the reporter as the
- flustered pupil.
- </p>
- <p> Few libel cases have dragged on longer or sullied both sides
- more than the suit by Freudian psychoanalyst Jeffrey Masson
- against Janet Malcolm of the New Yorker, who pilloried him in
- a 1983 profile, that was finally brought before a jury last
- week. Masson, a scholar of Sanskrit who holds a Ph.D. from Harvard,
- contends that since the article was published he has been all
- but unemployable. No longer a therapist, he has written books
- including the critically acclaimed memoir My Father's Guru and
- recently taught media ethics at the University of Michigan,
- where he has been living in the home of his fiance, controversial
- feminist law professor Catharine MacKinnon. Malcolm continues
- under contract to the New Yorker, where her editor was her husband
- Gardner Botsford. She conceded on the witness stand that her
- techniques have "freaked out" colleagues--not to mention most
- other practitioners of her craft.
- </p>
- <p> Even if Masson prevails, enough of what Malcolm said about him
- has been validated to brand him forever as a reckless egomaniac,
- philanderer and self-promoter who dared to impugn the integrity
- of Freud, the demigod of his former field. If Malcolm wins,
- it will be despite her readiness to alter facts in service of
- her vision of truth. She admitted cleaning up and clarifying
- Masson's prose, which is common journalistic practice. She also
- combined remarks made months apart, in different circumstances
- and on different coasts, into a single monologue--which is
- not common practice at all. She felt entitled, she testified,
- because "translation" is needed to render spoken language readable:
- "You can do it if you don't change the meaning." Masson claims
- that on occasion Malcolm went way beyond translation, substituting
- colorfully phrased inferences for his actual words and putting
- them between quotation marks nonetheless.
- </p>
- <p> Masson's troubles began well before Malcolm's scathing portrait.
- After a meteoric rise in psychoanalytic circles, he was sacked
- from his heir apparency at the Freud Archives in 1981 for disparaging
- the private behavior of the founder of psychoanalysis and for
- attempting to debunk some of the master's key thinking on the
- prevalence and significance of child abuse--an act of iconoclasm
- that Malcolm aptly termed self-destructive. Masson sued the
- Archives for $13 million and accepted a settlement of $150,000.
- Then he made another decision that in retrospect seems even
- more self-destructive: he agreed to cooperate with Malcolm,
- a defender of traditional Freudian analysis and thus an ideological
- opposite. When he read the resulting piece, Masson said, "I
- realized I had been totally betrayed." Malcolm retorts that
- he betrayed himself.
- </p>
- <p> Both of them may be right. Although Masson describes Malcolm's
- portrayal of him as "a lie from start to finish," the items
- at issue are five short passages from a 48,500-word profile.
- Had they been printed as paraphrases, there would almost certainly
- be no trial: during 40 hours of tape-recorded interviews, Masson
- said sufficiently similar things that the disputed words could
- be deemed a reasonable interpretation of his views.
- </p>
- <p> Reporting about another battle between a writer and an irate
- subject, Malcolm opined that every journalist was a "confidence
- man," tricking subjects into a sense of intimacy to extract
- secrets. She added, in what many in the news business saw as
- an unwitting confession, "Every journalist who is not too stupid
- or too full of himself to notice what is going on knows that
- what he does is morally indefensible." Whether or not she scammed
- Masson, Malcolm certainly got closer than many reporters consider
- proper: she listened without objection to sexual overtures,
- joined him for a walk on a beach, invited him and a girlfriend
- to stay with her and her husband as houseguests. Such fraternization
- is frowned on because it can make a reporter too indulgent.
- But socializing can also lull an interviewee into letting down
- his guard because he thinks of the talks as private, not adversarial.
- </p>
- <p> Usually Malcolm recorded conversations with Masson; sometimes
- she didn't. In some cases she didn't even retain notes, just
- summaries typed later. That does not prove Masson right. As
- Malcolm's attorney, Gary Bostwick, brought out last week, Masson
- previously denied saying other things that turned up on the
- tapes. The disputed passages are a little sexier than the rest
- of the article, more egocentric and extreme. Malcolm continues
- to insist that they are what Masson said. He insists they are
- not. Says First Amendment attorney Floyd Abrams: "This is not
- a case about a mistake. Someone is lying."
- </p>
- <p> Even if jurors decide that Malcolm warped or made up her quotes,
- however, Masson faces an arduous struggle. As a public figure,
- he must demonstrate that the remarks were false and that Malcolm
- either knew them to be false or went ahead without caring whether
- they were true. He must also prove the fabrications were materially
- damaging, which may be harder. Given his history at the Freud
- Archives and the intemperate things he unquestionably said when
- the tape recorder was on, how effectively can Masson attribute
- his bumpy career path to a few quotes that may have been distorted
- when the tape recorder was off?
- </p>
- <p> As public melodrama, the clash fits old-time producer Sam Harris'
- definition of bad theater: there is no one to root for. Its
- legal significance is whatever precedent it may set about how
- accurate words must be that are placed inside quotation marks.
- Such punctuation, all parties agree, makes a special claim to
- be objective, unfiltered fact. During pretrial maneuvering,
- federal appellate judges ruled that journalists have a free-press
- right to tamper willfully with quotes. The U.S. Supreme Court
- disagreed. In an opinion by Justice Anthony Kennedy, it held
- that changing quotes might not in itself prove legal malice
- but was "inconsistent with responsible journalism."
- </p>
- <p> Like many a talented nonfiction writer, Malcolm has come to
- think of herself as an artist. Her narratives proclaim her a
- storyteller, not just a fact gatherer. Without that gift and
- some measure of literary license--with only a daily newspaper's
- flat objectivity--a 48,500-word profile would be unbearable.
- Perhaps she could make a case for broadening the boundaries
- of "responsible journalism." She has not. Her defense is that
- her quotations are literal. They ought to be. Writers use the
- quoted word because it has a special piquancy--the sacred
- appeal of being, in an often shadowy world, sharply and unarguably
- true.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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