Oh, the irony! Julian Assange wants to keep his autobiography private
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The irony is irresistible.
founder Julian Assange, who became famous 鈥 or infamous, depending on your point of view 鈥 for publishing classified information without authorization, is confronting the publication, without his consent, of his own autobiography.
Independent British publisher Canongate Books released 鈥淛ulian Assange: the Unauthorized Autobiography,鈥 Thursday, against Mr. Assange鈥檚 wishes. The book chronicles Assange鈥檚 life from his Australian childhood to his time as a teenage computer hacker to the founding of his controversial website and subsequent legal troubles.
Assange, who made many enemies in media organizations and governments around the world after leaking classified documents in WikiLeaks, is doubtless angered by the move to publish against his consent, .
鈥淭he irony that the operator of the world鈥檚 largest whistleblowing site, responsible for releasing hundreds of thousands of secret documents, will himself find his private comments aired in public is likely to raise a smile among diplomats and politicians around the world,鈥 it said in a piece titled
Assange and gained worldwide fame with a series of high-profile leaks of secret US files, including the publication of some 250,000 classified State Department cables.
The decision to publish the unauthorized autobiography is the result of a contractual dispute. The 40-year-old founder of WikiLeaks sold Canongate the rights to his memoir last year and began working with a ghostwriter on the book. Canongate sold rights to more than 30 publishers around the world, including Alfred A. Knopf in the US. Meanwhile, Assange recorded more than 50 hours of interviews about his life. At the time, Assange had said he hoped the book would be 鈥渙ne of the unifying documents of our generation.鈥
But as the project progressed, Assange grew increasingly troubled by the autobiography, perhaps concerned that his interviews might be used against him in court, declaring 鈥渁ll memoir is prostitution.鈥 He tried to cancel his contract with the publisher, but never repaid the advance Canongate gave him (believed to be in the hundreds of thousands of pounds), which Assange used to pay his legal fees. As such, Canongate said, it decided to publish the first draft the WikiLeaks founder delivered to them in March.
Knopf, which also paid Assange a large advance, abandoned its plans for publication.
鈥淲e have cancelled our contract for Julian Assange鈥檚 memoir,鈥 Knopf said in a statement. 鈥淭he author did not complete his work on the manuscript or deliver a book to us in accordance with our agreement. We will not be moving forward with our publication.鈥
, which has seen a version of the book, Assange 鈥渟ays he does not oppose privacy but opposes secrecy by institutions 鈥榯o protect themselves against the truth of the evil they have done鈥 and says that 鈥榙isclosure is my business, but we don鈥檛 deal in gossip.鈥欌
The book also contains a chapter on Assange鈥檚 version of events in Sweden, which led to charges of sexual assault and battles over his extradition. He writes of being set up by the US government and maintains that his relations with the two women were consensual.
鈥淚 wasn't a reliable boyfriend, or even a very courteous sleeping partner....鈥 the book reads. 鈥淚 may be a chauvinist pig of some sort, but I am no rapist.鈥
Canongate said the book is, "like its author, passionate, provocative and opinionated."
No doubt.
Husna Haq is a Monitor correspondent.
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