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E-raamat: Making of Medieval History

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  • Formaat: 256 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Mar-2017
  • Kirjastus: York Medieval Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781782049401
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: 256 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Mar-2017
  • Kirjastus: York Medieval Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781782049401

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Essays on the discipline of medieval history and its practitioners, from the late eighteenth century onwards.

A hugely interesting set of essays, reflecting on a variety of ways in which medieval history has developed to the present time. Scholarship of the highest standard, deeply thought-provoking and deeply engaged with the inheritances and future tasks of medieval academic history. The collection will be essential reading for all medievalists. John Arnold, Professor of Medieval History, University of Cambridge.

Medieval history is present in manyforms in our world. Monuments from the Middle Ages or inspired by them are a familiar feature of landscapes across Europe and beyond; the period between the end of the Roman Empire in Western Europe and the Reformation and European expansion is an essential part of our imagination, be it conveyed through literature, the arts, science fiction or even video games; it is also commonly invoked in political debates. Specialists in the field have played a majorrole in shaping modern perceptions of the era. But little is known about the factors that have influenced them and their work. The essays in this volume provide original insights into the fabric and dissemination of medieval history as a scholarly discipline from the late eighteenth century onwards. The case-studies range from the creation of specific images of the Middle Ages to the ways in which medievalists have dealt with European identity, contributed to making and deconstructing myths and, more specifically, addressed questions relating to land and frontiers as well as to religion.

GRAHAM A. LOUD is Professor of Medieval History at the University of Leeds;MARTIAL STAUB is Professor of Medieval History at the University of Sheffield.

Contributors: Christine Caldwell Ames, Peter Biller, Michael Borgolte, Patrick Geary, Richard Hitchcock, Bernhard Jussen, Joep Leerssen, G.A. Loud, Christian Lübke, Jinty Nelson, Bastian Schlüter, Martial Staub, Ian Wood.

Arvustused

Editors Graham A. Loud and Martial Staub have excelled themselves in producing a collection of articles that is in many ways more than the sum of its parts.. [ It] acts as a primer for further discussions about the role, place, and limitations of medieval history, and should be required reading for undergraduates. * PARERGON * [ T]his is a particularly timely volume, both for medievalists and for historians more generally. * AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW * Exemplary scholarship from some of the leading names in the field is combined with new perspectives on old problems and a refreshing dose of self-awareness and political consciousness. * MEDIEVAL REVIEW * The Making of Medieval History strikes a valiant balance between historiographical overview for the field while still providing starting points of historical narrative and evaluation. The contribution to the field should not be understated. * MEDIEVALLY SPEAKING *

List of Illustrations
vii
Acknowledgements xi
List of Contributors
xiii
Introduction 1(14)
Graham A. Loud
Martial Staub
Part One Imagining / Inventing the Middle Ages
15(40)
1 Jinty Nelson, Why Re-Inventing Medieval History is a Good Idea
17(20)
2 Ian Wood, Literary Composition and the Early Medieval Historian in the Nineteenth Century
37(18)
Part Two Constructing a European Identity
55(30)
3 Patrick Geary, European Ethnicities and European as an Ethnicity: Does Europe Have Too Much History?
57(13)
4 Michael Borgolte, A Crisis of the Middle Ages? Deconstructing and Constructing European Identities in a Globalized World
70(15)
Part Three National history / Notions of Myth
85(68)
5 Bastian Schluter, Barbarossa's Heirs: Nation and Medieval History in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Germany
87(14)
6 Joep Leerssen, Once Upon a Time in Germany: Medievalism, Academic Romanticism and Nationalism
101(26)
7 Bernhard Jussen, Between Ideology and Technology: Depicting Charlemagne in Modern Times
127(26)
Part Four Land and Frontiers
153(32)
8 Richard Hitchcock, Reflections on the Frontier in Early Medieval Iberia
155(12)
9 Christian Lubke, Germany's Growth to the East: from the Polabian Marches to Germania Slavica
167(18)
Part Five Rewriting Medieval Religion
185(38)
10 Christine Caldwell Ames, Distance and Difference: Medieval Inquisition as American History
187(20)
11 Peter Biller, Mind the Gap: Modern and Medieval `Religious' Vocabularies
207(16)
Index 223
G.A. LOUD Is Professor Emeritus of Medieval History at the University of Leeds. He is an acknowledged authority on the Normans in the south, and more generally on southern Italy during the Central Middle Ages. G.A. LOUD Is Professor Emeritus of Medieval History at the University of Leeds. He is an acknowledged authority on the Normans in the south, and more generally on southern Italy during the Central Middle Ages. PETE BILLER is Professor Emeritus in the Department of History at the University of York.