I am far removed from academia, but isn't LGBT studies an accepted part of the 
leftish canon?  And isn't it inherent to the relevance of such studies that the 
fact that one is LGBT is in turn relevant to what one writes or thinks 
regarding literature, politics, etc.?  So if so, would it not be consistent 
with LGBT studies to try and connect Keynes' economic thinking to his  
homosexuality?

David Shemano

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jim Devine
Sent: Tuesday, May 07, 2013 10:55 AM
To: Pen-l
Subject: [Pen-l] the Ferguson files

from SLATE:
Niall Ferguson in 1995: Keynes' Homosexuality Caused His Views on the Treaty of 
Versailles

By Matthew Yglesias

Posted Tuesday, May 7, 2013, at 10:44 AM

Niall Ferguson has already apologized for saying over the weekend that John 
Maynard Keynes' homosexuality was at the root of his views on fiscal policy, 
but Brad DeLong has recovered a remarkable 1995 Spectator article in which 
Ferguson alleges that Keynes' views on the Treaty of Versailles were also 
caused by his homosexuality. In this case, Ferguson's view is less that Keynes 
had a distinctive gay outlook on the issue, and more that a gay crush on a 
German representative to the conference led him to adopt pro-German and 
pro-inflation opinions.

The article's conclusion:

>> From 1919 onwards, for reasons which owed as much to emotion as economic 
>> logic, he had repeatedly encouraged the Germans in their resistance to 
>> Allied demands. He had heard and echoed their arguments at Versailles, 
>> predicting currency depreciation, the dumping of German exports and the 
>> westward march of Bolshevism as consequences of the treaty. He had shared 
>> their dismay at the reparations total set in 1921, and predicted German 
>> default from the outset. Even when he began to suspect that his friends were 
>> exaggerating their fiscal difficulties, this only inclined him to egg them 
>> on to a more confrontational strategy. Only when this ended in the complete 
>> collapse of the currency did Keynes distance himself.

>> All this sheds revealing light on Keynes's later views on inflation. 
>> Those who see Keynesianism as, at root, an inflationary doctrine will 
>> not perhaps be surprised; just as those familiar with Bloomsbury will 
>> appreciate why Keynes fell so hard for the representative of an enemy 
>> power. Only those-like Robert Skidelsky-who seek to rescue his 
>> reputation as a monetary theorist may find Keynes's conduct less easy 
>> to account for. <<

I have not read The Economic Consequences of the Peace, but am somewhat 
familiar with the general debates at the time. My view of the situation is that 
the whole question of an "enemy power" is actually the crux of the dispute 
here. Keynes, in keeping with general liberal sentiments at the time and 
vindicated by history, took the view that it was foolish for France and Britain 
to try to treat Germany as an enemy-to-be-crushed rather than a 
partner-to-be-rehabilitated. The only possible consequence of crushing the 
German economy would be to compel the Germans to overthrow the treaty and thus 
start a new war.
This is roughly what eventually happened, and obviously in the late-1940s the 
Western allies took a different approach, which paid off. I don't know if any 
key Truman administration advisors were seduced by sexy German conference 
representatives. Perhaps someday we'll learn that was the real story of the 
Marshall Plan, in which case I think we'd have to be thankful for the emergence 
of a sentiment that could transcend petty nationalism.

--
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own way and 
let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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