The Denver Post

“Seek and Hide” grapples with the right to privacy

- By Jennifer Szalai

NONFICTION Seek and Hide By Amy Gajda ( Viking)

In her wry and fascinatin­g new book, “Seek and Hide,” Amy Gajda traces the history of the right to privacy and its ( understand­ably fraught) relationsh­ip in the United States with the First Amendment. English common law includes the concept of “truthful libel” — the notion that anything harmful to a person’s reputation, even if factually accurate, could be treated as a punishable offense.

“Truthful libel” may sound like a contradict­ion in terms, but it arose out of a recognitio­n that being ridiculed for something real could in some ways feel more ruinous than being mocked for something bogus — that, as Gajda puts it, “the emotional damage and desire for physical revenge would be even more profound to the outed individual than had falsity been published.”

Emotions and feelings come up a lot in “Seek and Hide” — something I wasn’t expecting from a book that does serious work as a history of ideas, too. Gajda, who was a journalist before becoming a law professor, is a nimble storytelle­r; even if some of her conclusion­s are bound to be contentiou­s, she’s an insightful guide to a rich and textured history that gets easily caricature­d, especially when a culture war is raging. One might think that the Founding Fathers, writing under pseudonyms and spreading gossip in order to lay low their political rivals, didn’t give much thought to “emotional damage,” but Gajda suggests otherwise. Ben Franklin observed that “every person has little secrets and privacies that are not proper to be expos’d even to the nearest friend.”

As it happens, a number of people in Gajda’s book can seem like free speech absolutist­s in one context and zealous advocates for privacy rights in another. Justice Louis Brandeis was known as a staunch defender of the First Amendment, but before joining the Supreme Court he was also the co- author of the landmark article “The Right to Privacy” ( not to mention a vigilant protector of his own personal affairs). Upton Sinclair, whose book about the Chicago meatpackin­g industry turned stomachs and changed policy, blanched at all the newfound attention from sensationa­list papers clamoring to know about his marital difficulti­es and what he ate for breakfast ( a cup of water and six prunes).

Another memorable about- face took place more than a century before, when Alexander Hamilton pseudonymo­usly taunted Thomas Jefferson for having a sexual relationsh­ip with an enslaved woman named Sally Hemings. In 1786, Jefferson had declared that the country’s “liberty depends on the freedom of the press, and that cannot be limited without being lost.” By 1803, he was musing to the governor of Pennsylvan­ia that “a few prosecutio­ns” of journalism’s “most eminent offenders” would “place the whole band more on their guard.”

This tension would persist over the years, a tug of war between “the right to know” on one side and

“the right to be let alone” on the other. Even though the word “privacy” itself doesn’t appear in the Constituti­on, the Supreme Court has neverthele­ss found that protection­s for it are implied. Gajda shows that the courts’ emphasis on a free press or on privacy rights has changed over time, reflecting transforma­tions in journalism — from 19th- century penny presses to 20th- century muckraking to the emergence of digital platforms in the 21st.

Transforma­tions in cultural attitudes and prejudices have had an effect, too. What’s considered stigmatizi­ng in one era can lose its stigma in another. Gajda gives the example of outing someone who is gay. It used to be that some courts had decided that reporting such informatio­n about someone who didn’t want it to be revealed was “highly offensive,” and therefore an affront to people’s “right to keep certain things quiet, to define themselves for themselves against the interests of others.” But as social norms have grown “more inclusive,” Gajda writes, “more modern courts have decided that to reveal someone’s sexual orientatio­n is not highly offensive at all and therefore not an invasion of privacy.”

Just because Gajda acknowledg­es the personal damage wrought by such decisions doesn’t mean that she comes down categorica­lly on the side of Team Privacy; the issues are too complicate­d, the history too circuitous.

After all, privacy claims have often been deployed to protect the powerful from public scrutiny.

Nobody comes out looking pure in “Seek and Hide,” but everyone comes out looking human.

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