Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: Oisín
Date: 2020-03-06 17:52:56
Reaction Score: 3
Did "women or people of colour in a medieval context" live in a medieval British context? And "You know they exist"??! What is medieval anyway?
Ok - so I would have thought that it would be a case of evidence first - ie that the evidence drives what theories we may or not have. By having it as questions first, that allows you to drive an agenda. You can ask questions about the issues of the day - climate change, religion, terrorism, sexuality, etc and frame any historical context along those terms. Eg, you could no doubt express the 2-toed, "1600" year old socks that KD posted a pic of, in the terms of any issue you like. But that wouldn't really explain anything about them, would it?
I think the historical interpretation you outline, doesn't help increase understanding about the past. It really only says something about us in the present. It seems to me that all it does is provide greater historical 'camouflage' for what what might be a totally modern point of view. So if some elite group chooses to promote a viewpoint, eg social justice warriors, they can also call up an interpretation of history that better suits their agenda, and the history department will provide it.
It sounds to me like you are applying personal perspectives onto the historical narrative. Perhaps you have lots of work, on account of your perspective meeting the current bill. Your perspective doesn't sound unbiased, but then whose isn't?
To be honest, I am not surprised.
Framing it another way, it sounds to me like there are multiple narratives and interpretations - I'm sure it was ever thus - but the underlying reality has nothing to do with it. Probably for some of us on this site, we do try to get to an underlying truth - we do try to let the evidence do the talking. But I think we're on our own. I think I can also see how in only a few years the (poor) interpretation of history we were taught at school will be replaced by another (equally poor) history for our children/grandchildren.
Hi Feralimal,
Thanks for your response.
Yes, we know women and people of colour existed in the medieval period. The world didn’t consist solely of white men until the 15th or 16th century. I wouldn’t have thought that is too surprising.
Medieval is a rough periodisation of the time between the end of the classical period in the fifth century and the beginning of the early-modern period in the 15th century. It applies to Europe, and parts of north Africa and western Asia.
Sorry if those answers are a bit abrupt, but I don’t know how else to respond to your initial questions.
Evidence certainly drives theory formation, but the entire world is evidence of something. So, before you can begin your research you need some way of deciding where to start looking at evidence. For instance, I just glanced back through a few of your recent posts and noticed you said you have looked into the history of the Parthenon (
Acropolis aka Necropolis, Schliemann and 1877 Cremation Temple). Why? Unless you woke up that morning in the Parthenon, I’m sure there were a whole host of more immediate things you could have looked into – the histories of beds, cotton, duvets, bedrooms, toothbrushes, cereal, sausages… etc. All of them are valid areas of study, so why did you ignore all of the bits of evidence around you and go looking into the Parthenon instead? This is not an attack on you, by the way. The Parthenon is fascinating and there is nothing wrong with being interested in it. My point is that we all choose a starting point based on our interests and the questions we want answered. You want to know more about the Parthenon, so you look for evidence relating to it; I want to know more about prisoners, so I look for evidence relating to them; etc.
I’m sorry to be abrupt again, but have you read Tin’s work? If not how can you decide whether it helps our understanding of the past? On what do you base that assumption?
If you have read it, great, I would love to hear what specifically you disagree with.
Naturally my perspective is not unbiased, as you say yourself everybody is biased. However, what I have worked on consistently over the last decade, and indeed what my training as a historian has taught me to do, is to be aware of my biases and to try and keep them out of my research.
It is true that you can interpret evidence in different ways, but then it is also true that things can have multiple meanings. A painting may be a family heirloom, a symbol of wealth and power, a coded message about the artists beliefs, etc. It can be all those things at once and each of this things may evidence in the telling of different histories.
I absolutely respect your desire to get to an underlying truth, that is, in a sense, what we are all trying to get to. But I’m sure you see that the second you try understand any evidence of that truth, you too are interpreting, and the second you start telling a friend about it or posting about it here, you start constructing a narrative. Multiple narratives and interpretations are just different ways of looking at the same evidence.