
Medieval Europe
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Acheter pour 21,46 $
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Narrateur(s):
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Derek Perkins
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Auteur(s):
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Chris Wickham
À propos de cet audio
The millennium between the breakup of the western Roman Empire and the Reformation was a long and hugely transformative period - one not easily chronicled within a single volume. Yet distinguished historian Chris Wickham has taken up the challenge in this landmark book, and he succeeds in producing the most riveting account of medieval Europe in a generation.
Tracking the entire sweep of the Middle Ages across Europe, Wickham focuses on important changes century by century, including such pivotal crises and moments as the fall of the western Roman Empire, Charlemagne's reforms, the feudal revolution, the challenge of heresy, the destruction of the Byzantine Empire, the rebuilding of late medieval states, and the appalling devastation of the Black Death. He provides illuminating vignettes that underscore how shifting social, economic, and political circumstances affected individual lives and international events. Wickham offers both a new conception of Europe's medieval period and a provocative revision of exactly how and why the Middle Ages matter.
©2016 Chris Wickham (P)2017 Blackstone Audio, Inc.Great introduction to major themes
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Indeed each of the chapters could (and has) been a book or course all on it’s own but this work’s strength is the way it brings a thread of progress to the whole while acknowledging that much of that is coming from hindsight and wasn’t a planned outcome of the people at the time.
I enjoyed the approach and the author’s skill and shall seek more by the same.
A well crafted overview of some 500 years of history
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Factual, but does not flow well at all.
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1) An almost incessant and grating reference to future chapters throughout. At points it seemed every paragraph was capped with a 'see chapter X for more on this'. The book follows a pretty logical structure, and I found these at first simply useless and redundant, but eventually irritating and wasted effort on the narrator's part. I enjoy listening to these books while working on the lawn or house or doing manual labour. I, nor many others I doubt, will be pausing midway through a chapter to jump ahead three or four and then jump back. It's just nonsensical and these references contributed very little and quickly became an annoyance.
2)The author's focus is very heavily slanted towards political power structures and economic development. To the point that he often ignores or simply glosses things like linguistics, ethnicity and genetic evidence, and physical culture. This has implications in his view of medieval Europe, such as when he argues against the existence of anything we could conceptually call a cultural Europe due to a lack of political and trade links. This completely ignores social structures, ethnicity and language, shared physical culture and design we find in gravegoods, etc. Or when discussing the pre-Christian religions and pre-Feudal social structures of Northern Europe, he seems to contradict, gloss or ignore the fact that many of these cultures were very closely related through their common Indo-European ancestry and languages. Instead he claims that the religions were a hodge podge and unrelated, or that the political/economic hierarchies of these decentralized regions were stemmed mostly from circumstance and environment, rather then a connected worldview/social structure. There is no acknowledgement that though these people may not have had the political/economic ties with southern Europe that Arabs, Turks, North Africans, etc did, that they still shared common traits that made them 'cousins'.
3) Although I laud him for his care to not frame the motivations of medieval Christians or Muslims through a modern lense, and attempts to take their peity and motivations as genuine and not simple opportunism, he does exactly this when discussing pre-Christian polities and actors. In his discussion of the Christianization of Northern Europe, the decisions to either embrace conversion or resist are framed as opportunist political moves by those who simply want to tap into or shield themselves from the imperial power and hegemony of Francia and broader Christendom. This is a topic that is rarely discussed in detail, and while his timeline and provided anecdotes were interesting, there was little discussion of alternate motives that may have played on these peoples minds.
Again, overall I found it a really interesting book and the wide coverage including Byzantium and Eastern Europe was refreshing and informative, as this often isn't covered in Western European focused books. Worth a listen, just be aware of the authors biases/focus.
Pretty Good Historical Overview w/ a Few Problems
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Great historical survey
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By no means “light reading,” but still accessible for anyone with more than a passing interest in the period.
Excellent survey of Medieval history by an accomplished scholars
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To his credit, Wickham writes with commendable prose & vocabulary, presents an authoritative case with defensible posits, and generates a logical, syllabus-quality organization.. but much of the topic discussed is frankly mind-numbingly boring.
Derek Perkins reads very professionally with enough emotiveness to blunt some of the yawn-worthy aspects of the text. His diction, cadence, timbre, and tone are spot-on. Blackstone Audio did well to cast Perkins for the project and provide creditable technical support.
Some readers may be looking for an audio textbook - and will likely be disappointed with Wickham's approach in this book. I, however, was looking for a more commercial presentation - and 'Medieval Europe' isn't that either.
I rate the book 4 stars out of 10. It's a fair listen for some interesting facts, but doesn't bring a fascinating segment of history to life by any means. If you can get it for free - as I did - it's not crazy to give it a try, but this book is not worth money if they ask you for it.
ATTN PRODUCERS: This product would be improved considerably with a PDF Appendix/Maps/Timeline.
Informative.. but Dry. Painfully Dry.
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Woke and Dull
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He drops names and dates and makes blanket statements that are continually hedged with “although” and “however”. The effect is very thin. He writes in compound clauses that confuse the waffling even more.
Too bad, I really wanted to find it interesting but could not tolerate all the vagueness.
Names and numbers
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