Название: What is Medieval History?
Автор: John H. Arnold
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Жанр: История
isbn: 9781509532582
isbn:
In England, in particular, the professionalization of history over the course of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries was played out in the study of the middle ages. This partly followed the German example – in both countries, it had been medieval records that formed the basis for the great series of edited sources, the Monumenta Germaniae Historica (begun 1826) and the Rolls Series (begun 1857) – but also reflected both an English pride in its long constitutional history, and an English abhorrence for current political argument. The middle ages, it was felt, was a suitably distant period for university study, unlikely to lead to unseemly debate and dissension among modern undergraduates. For Oxford and Cambridge, in the pre-war years, medieval history was political precisely by dint of being apolitical: no current religious debates or party political issues to cause upset, and hence a suitable arena of study for the developing minds of the Empire’s future administrators. A succession of Grand Old Men of English medievalism is associated with both universities in the late nineteenth century, but none of them is now read for any present insight. They excluded from their middle ages anything that unbalanced the smooth progress of the ship of state; assumed rather than analysed the case for English ‘exceptionalism’, thus furthering England’s tendency to look inward rather than outward; and a thick blanket of social and political complacency slumps suffocatingly over their prose. The interesting research and teaching were being done in London and Manchester, by figures such as A. F. Pollard and T. F. Tout; and the most exciting work was by a scholar of law, rather than history, F. W. Maitland.7 Maitland is still worth reading today, for while later research has corrected some of the details of his work, his sensitive understanding of law’s structural relationship to society continues to inspire.8
The next ‘revolution’ in historiography also had a strong medieval element, this time in France. Lucien Febvre and Marc Bloch, two graduates of the École normale supérieure, had a new vision for what history could become. The perspectives associated with the pair have become known by the title of the journal they founded: the Annales. Febvre’s work concerned the early modern period, but Bloch was a medievalist. They wanted to broaden the horizon of historiography, free it from the pursuit of factual political narrative and explore instead the fields of geography, society, culture, even the psyche. Strongly influenced by sociology and anthropology, Bloch’s vision of the middle ages was complex and panoramic. His two-volume Feudal Society attempted to construct an analysis of the period, changing over time, that emphasized structural connections that ran vertically through all of society. Scholarship has moved on here in various ways, and (as we shall see in Chapter 4) arguments about the nature of feudalism have altered considerably since Bloch’s day; but his attempt at writing a complete history, sensitive to all parts of the medieval landscape, remains a solitary beacon. Bloch’s other great legacy was his book on historiography, Apologie pour l’histoire, ou Métier d’historien (published posthumously and translated into English as The Historian’s Craft). Despite being unfinished – Bloch, a member of the French resistance, was still writing it when murdered by the Gestapo in 1944 – it continues to provide a brilliant introduction to doing history.9
The Annales mode of historiography continued strongly, never following a strict orthodoxy, but, rather, a broad perspective and set of complementary inclinations. Georges Duby and Jacques Le Goff developed Bloch’s legacy, the former pursuing in particular the important shifts in socioeconomic structures, the latter more interested in the cultural mentalité of the period. For all the French medievalists, Marxism provided a useful set of intellectual tools, and in the case of Duby in particular, encouraged the careful study of economic relations in understanding social structures. There had been earlier Marxist works of medieval history – Gaetano Salvemini had published a book on late thirteenth-century Florence in 1899 that considered its society in terms of class structures – but it was the Annales that brought theory sustainedly to bear on the period.
This is not to say that Bloch, Duby, Le Goff and others were all Marxists in a personal sense; indeed, in a broader perspective, the Annales group were distanced from the more explicitly Marxist traditions. It was, rather, that the French educational system, then as today, saw the insights of Marxism as part of the intellectual landscape. In the latter half of the twentieth century, there were some medievalists writing within Communist societies: a number of East German scholars, and the Russian Aron Gurevich. The work of the former was deleteriously affected by their political context, restricted to following the Party line on topics such as medieval heresy (where one had to parrot the perspectives of Friedrich Engels’s brief comments in his Peasant War in Germany) and the reflexive conflation of ecclesiastical and secular powers. Gurevich, inspired by the Annales tradition, but with a helpfully critical distance from it, is a very different case. His work was hampered by his relative lack of access to archival source materials, but this handicap inspired deep reflection on medieval society and culture, with a particular pursuit of the cultural fissures between medieval social classes. Marxism also provided a particular boost for historiography in England: the influential Historians’ Group of the British Communist Party, which existed from 1946 to 1956, established a new historiographical tradition not dissimilar to that of the Annales, but with a more clearly political intent. Its medieval element resided particularly with Rodney Hilton, whose work pursued the theme of class conflict in medieval English society.10 Past and Present, the journal founded by the Historians’ Group, though itself now no longer wedded to Marxism, continues to provide a strong platform for medieval enquiry, among other periods.
Work in America has in part followed European tides – as in other countries, many American medievalists of the early twentieth century did their training in Germany, and brought Rankean models of historiographical pedagogy back to their own universities – but has also developed its own foci and interests.11 The particularly American revolution in historiography, the ‘New History’ associated with Carl Becker and Charles Beard post-World War I, was notably unpopular with medievalists, who remained staunch defenders of ‘scientific objectivity’ against this perceived relativism. The biggest influence on medieval history in the first half of the twentieth century was an underlying commitment to modernizing ‘Progressive’ politics, associated with President Woodrow Wilson. Indeed, one of the formative figures in medieval studies, Charles Homer Haskins (1870–1937), was a friend and adviser to Wilson; and through Haskins’s student Joseph Strayer, and Strayer’s many graduate students, one can trace a continued line of interest in the growth of the medieval state, the modernizing elements within medieval society, and so forth.
Overall, the shifts within medieval history in the twentieth century largely followed broader currents in historiography. The Rankean period of professionalization focused its energy particularly on studies of high politics, with accompanying interests in the history of the law and the development of national constitutions. Over time, historiography came to admit medieval society and economics as legitimate areas that expanded the possibilities of the discipline; religion, for example, could be analysed as a sociocultural phenomenon rather than simply ecclesiastical governance. Women became a topic for sustained study particularly in the 1970s (though pioneering work in this area dates back to the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century, for example by the economic historian Eileen Power), and the presence and treatment of minorities – Jews, lepers, heretics, homosexuals, slaves and ‘Saracens’ – in the 1980s (though excellent work on Jews and heretics had already appeared some decades earlier), and in both cases American scholars largely led the way. New philosophies of history, often rather loosely and not very helpfully termed ‘postmodernism’, have occasioned medievalist engagement, most explicitly (both pro- and anti-) in the US and France.12 The shifts had many causes, some stretching out into academia far beyond the particular field of medievalism, СКАЧАТЬ