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result(s) for
"Plagiarism United States History 19th century."
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History and First Descriptions of Autism: Asperger Versus Kanner Revisited
2016
When reading Michael Fitzgerald’s chapter entitled ‘Autism: Asperger’s Syndrome—History and First Descriptions’ in ‘Asperger’s Disorder’ edited by Rausch, Johnson and Casanova, a while ago, one of us was struck by his contention that Kanner was guilty of plagiarism as well as non-attribution of Asperger’s 1938 paper ‘Das psychisch abnorme kind’ (Fitzgerald in Asperger’s disorder. Informa Healthcare, New York,
2008
) published in a Vienna weekly. Steve Silberman has discovered evidence that Kanner rescued Asperger’s chief diagnostician from the Nazis in 1944 so must have been aware of Asperger’s work and conclusions. Fitzgerald was on the right track but it appears that Kanner may have plagiarised Asperger’s ideas rather than his 1938 paper.
Journal Article
The Identity of \Outis\: A Further Chapter in the Poe-Longfellow War
1988
The literary war of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Edgar Allan Poe, which found Poe charging Longfellow with plagiarism, is explored. The identity of Outis, an anonymous correspondent who wrote to the \"Mirror\" to reprimand Poe for his overzealous attack on Longfellow, is identified as Poe's alterego, and is further explained.
Journal Article