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Biography: Morris L. Ernst, 1977

A Guide to the Collection of Oral History Interviews at Indiana University Bloomington

Finding aid prepared by the staff of the Center for the Study of History and Memory with a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities Division of Preservation and Access, 2000-2002

Overview of the Collection

Repository
Indiana University Center for the Study of History and Memory
Indiana University
400 North Sunrise Drive
Weatherly Hall North, Room 122
Bloomington, IN 47405
Phone: 812/855-2856
Fax: 812/855-0002
E-mail: ohrc@indiana.edu
http://www.indiana.edu/~cshm

Creator
Indiana University Center for the Study of History and Memory

Title
Biography: Morris L. Ernst, 1977

Project No.
ohrc022

Interviews
1 interview. Audiotapes, transcripts, and collateral materials.

Physical Location
Interviews are housed in Weatherly Hall North, Room 122. Copies are also housed at the Indiana University Archives in Herman B Wells Library E460. For other locations housing the interviews from this project, please contact the Center for the Study of History and Memory office.

Language
Materials are in English

Abstract
Malcolm A. Hoffman discusses his relationship with Morris L. Ernst, best known for his defense in the censorship case against Ulysses by James Joyce.

Scope and Content Note

This collection contains one interview, lasting thirty minutes. The interview contains 1 reels and a typed transcription of twelve pages.

Administrative Information

Acquisition Information
Oral history interviews conducted by the Indiana University Center for the Study of History and Memory from 1968 to the present, with particular focus on the history of twentieth-century America and the Midwest.
Usage Restrictions
The archive of the Center for the Study of History and Memory at Indiana University is open to the use of researchers. Copies of transcript pages are available only when such copies are permitted by the deed of gift signed by the interviewee. Scholars must honor any restrictions the interviewee placed on the use of the interview. Since some of our earlier (pre-computer) transcripts do not exist in final form, any editing marks in a transcript (deletions, additions, corrections) are to be quoted as marked. Tapes may not be copied for patrons unless the deed of gift permits it, and a transcript is unavailable for that interview. The same rules of use that apply to a transcript apply to the taped interview. Interviews may not be reproduced in full for any public use, but excerpted quotes may be used as long as researchers fully cite the data in their research, including accession number, interview date, interviewee's and interviewer's name, and page(s).
Preferred Citation
[interviewee first name last name] interview, by [interviewer first name last name], [interview date(s)], [call number], [project name], Center for the Study of History and Memory, Indiana University, Bloomington, [page number(s) or tape number and side if no transcript].
Interview List

Interviewee
Hoffman, Malcolm A. October 26, 1977 

Call Number
77-032

Physical Description

12 pages; 1 reel, 1 7/8 ips, 30 minutes; no index

Interviewer
Stevens, Kenneth R.

Access Status

Open

Scope and Content Note

Malcolm A. Hoffman discusses his recollections of the attorney Morris L. Ernst, born August 23, 1888, died May 1976, who was most famous for his defense of the censorship case against Ulyssesby James Joyce. Hoffman discusses Ernst's physical characteristics and mannerisms. He mentions that despite Hoffman's work in co-founding the American Civil Liberties Union and his anti-censorship stance, he was accused of being a spy for J. Edgar Hoover. Ernst was the representative of Rafael Trujillo, dictator of the Dominican Republic who was accused of murdering Jesús María Galindez. Ernst also represented Frank Costello, a New York organized crime boss arrested for tax evasion. Because Hoffman knew Ernst later in his career, he did not have a lot to say about the Ulysses case, although he did mention Ernst's autobiographies The Best as Yet and My Love Affair With the Law as good sources for information about the Ulysses case. Hoffman finally touches upon his perceptions of Ernst's views on the definition of pornography and its relationship to First Amendment rights.

  • Keywords
    • Corporation Names
    • American Civil Liberties Union
    • Occupation Names
    • attorney
    • Personal Names
    • Baldwin, Roger
    • Cerf, Bennett
    • Costello, Frank
    • Galindez, Jesús María
    • Hoover, J. Edgar
    • Joyce, James
    • Trujillo, Rafael
    • Woolsey, John M.
    • Place Names
    • New York, New York
    • Subjects
    • The Best as Yet
    • censorship
    • First Amendment legislation
    • My Love Affair With the Law
    • organized crime
    • pornography
    • trial strategy
    • Ulysses