Rabu, 18 Oktober 2017

On the Spot: Averil Cameron

http://ift.tt/eA8V8J

On the Spot: Averil Cameron

By History Today

We ask 20 questions of leading historians on why their research matters, one book everyone should read and their views on the Tudors …
[[{"fid":"33556","view_mode":"float_right","fields":{"format":"float_right","field_file_image_alt_text[und][0][value]":"","field_file_image_title_text[und][0][value]":"Averil Cameron"},"type":"media","link_text":null,"attributes":{"title":"Averil Cameron","class":"media-element file-float-right"}}]]Why are you a biographer  and military historian?I grew into it from ancient history and Late Antiquity. I always want to move on to something new.What’s the most important lesson history has taught you?That we need to understand the past if we want to understand the present, but also that over-simplified parallels between past and present do not work.Which history book has had the greatest influence on you?Edward Gibbon’s Decline and Fall.What book in your field should everyone read?The same. You don’t have to agree with Gibbon to admire him and find him a wonderful read.Which moment would you most like to go back to?No period was as comfortable as now. I would have hated the cold and draughts and not having access to tea and coffee.Which historian has had the greatest influence on you?Arnaldo Momigliano.Which person in history would you most like to have met?Procopius, so that I could ask him why he wrote the Secret History and how his works relate to each other.How many languages do you speak?Not enough, but I can read Greek and Latin really well.What’s the point of counterfactualism?It’s good for novelists, gamers and people who believe in the great men theory of history.What’s the most exciting field in history today?Global History.What historical topic have you changed your mind on?Too many to remember.Which genre of history do you like least?Narrative history. I like an argument.Is there an important historical text you have not read?I thought I would read the whole of St Augustine one day, but I haven’t even started it.What’s your favourite archive?Dumbarton Oaks in Washington DC.What’s the best museum?The Metropolitan in New York. Its location on Fifth Avenue and Central Park is so classy.Tudors or Stuarts?Tudors.Normans or Anglo-Saxons?Normans.Rome or Athens? Rome.Cromwell or Charles I?Charles I.Braudel or Gibbon?Gibbon. But it was exciting to dicover Braudel and structuralism.Averil Cameron was Warden of Keble College Oxford and Professor of Late Antique and Byzantine History at King’s College London. Her books include Byzantine Matters (Princeton, 2014).


from www.historytoday.com
via IFTTT

Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
Share on Google+
Tags :

Related : On the Spot: Averil Cameron

  • Pirates: Hard, Violent, Unpredictablehttp://ift.tt/eA8V8J Pirates captured by an increasingly powerful British state were routinely executed. But what happened to the families they left behind? fro ...
  • Refining the Body Beautifulhttp://ift.tt/eA8V8J There is beauty to be had from the smallest of objects. In the 18th century, tweezers, toothpicks and clippers became the signs of a polite, and ...
  • A Crude History of the Great Warhttp://ift.tt/eA8V8J At the beginning of the 20th century the Great Powers competed for the right to extract the vast oil reserves around the Iraqi ci ...
  • A World Revealed: Islamic Heartlands of the 18th centuryhttp://ift.tt/eA8V8J The chance survival of a ‘postbag’ of letters reveals a lost world of merchants, pilgrims, bankers and scholars. from www.historytoday.com ...
  • 1917: The fragility of Powerhttp://ift.tt/eA8V8J 1917: The fragility of Power By Paul Lay The First World War ensured the success of the Russian Revolution. Peace would have stra ...

0 komentar:

Posting Komentar