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The Forest People
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15109 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
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4 / 1989 |
3,149 Words |
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Henry A. Myers Henry A. Myers teaches political theory and the history of
ideas at James Madison University. He is the author of
Medieval Kingship (Nelson-Hall, 1982) and one of the
editors of The Global Experience: Readings in World
Civilization (2 vols., Prentice-Hall, 1987). |
HISTORY OF THE GOTHS
Herwig Wolfram
Berkley: University of California Press, 1988
622 pp., $39.95
American students can slip through many a Western civilization course without becoming aware that Gothic art and architecture, which they encounter in the form of color plates inserted into their textbooks, have absolutely nothing to do with the Goths, who appeared several chapters earlier in the account of the decline of the Roman Empire.
But if the Goths get no credit for medieval Gothic cathedrals, let alone Gothic novels and Gothic script, why are these called "Gothic"? What mark did the real Goths make on history? Or did they just destroy Rome and let it go at that?
Herwing Wolfram's book makes the Goths into human beings with a very colorful history. The Goths, whose civilization developed rapidly from relatively primitive origins, were constantly forced to work with, through, or against, the omnipresent superpower of Rome. Overall, they remind the reader of agile and alert Third Worlders forced up against a modern industrial power whose leaders do not quite know what to make of them or how to cope with them.
Wolfram is ideally suited for this task. Having taught paleography and the study of medieval documents for several decades at the University of Vienna before assuming directorship of the Austrian Institute for Historical Research, he has combined
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