In 1917, using the pseudonym of S. S. Van Dine, the US art critic and author
Willard Huntington Wright published
Misinforming a Nation, a 200+ page criticism of inaccuracies and biases of the
Encyclopædia Britannica eleventh edition. Wright claimed that
Britannica was "characterized by misstatements, inexcusable omissions, rabid and patriotic prejudices, personal animosities, blatant errors of fact, scholastic ignorance, gross neglect of non-British culture, an astounding egotism, and an undisguised contempt for American progress".
Amos Urban Shirk, known for having read the eleventh and fourteenth editions in their entirety, said he found the fourteenth edition to be a "big improvement" over the eleventh, stating that "most of the material had been completely rewritten".
Robert Collison, in
Encyclopaedias: Their History Throughout The Ages (1966), wrote of the eleventh edition that it "was probably the finest edition of the
Britannica ever issued, and it ranks with the and the
Espasa as one of the three greatest encyclopaedias. It was the last edition to be produced almost in its entirety in Britain, and its position in time as a summary of the world's knowledge just before the outbreak of World War I is particularly valuable". Sir
Kenneth Clark, in
Another Part of the Wood (1974), wrote of the eleventh edition, "One leaps from one subject to another, fascinated as much by the play of mind and the
idiosyncrasies of their authors as by the facts and dates. It must be the last encyclopaedia in the tradition of
Diderot which assumes that information can be made memorable only when it is slightly coloured by prejudice. When
T. S. Eliot wrote 'Soul curled up on the window seat reading the
Encyclopædia Britannica,' he was certainly thinking of the eleventh edition." (Clark refers to Eliot's 1929 poem "
Animula".) It was one of
Jorge Luis Borges's favourite works, and was a source of information and enjoyment for his entire working life. In 1912, mathematician
L. C. Karpinski criticised the eleventh edition for inaccuracies in articles on the
history of mathematics, none of which had been written by specialists. English writer and former priest
Joseph McCabe claimed in
Lies and Fallacies of the Encyclopædia Britannica (1947) that
Britannica was censored under pressure from the
Roman Catholic Church after the 11th edition. Initially, the eleventh edition received criticism from members of the Roman Catholic Church, who accused it of misrepresenting and being
biased against Catholics. The most "vociferous" American Catholic critics of the eleventh edition were editors of the
Christian magazine
America. In an April 2012 article, Nate Pederson of
The Guardian said that the eleventh edition represented "a peak of colonial optimism before the slaughter of war" and that the edition "has acquired an almost mythic reputation among collectors".
sexism, The eleventh edition
characterises the
Ku Klux Klan as protecting the white race and restoring order to the
American South after the
American Civil War, citing the need to "control the negro", and "the frequent occurrence of the crime of rape by negro men upon white women". Similarly,
the "Civilization" article argues for
eugenics, stating that it is irrational to "propagate low orders of intelligence, to feed the ranks of paupers, defectives and criminals ... which to-day constitute so threatening an obstacle to racial progress". The eleventh edition has no biography of
Marie Curie, despite her winning the
Nobel Prize in Physics in 1903 and the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1911, although she is mentioned briefly under the biography of her husband
Pierre Curie. The
Britannica employed a large female editorial staff who wrote hundreds of articles for which they were not given credit. == Public domain ==