I have always liked reading histories with a wide global sweep. The kind of history that one is trained at graduate school is what I call the miniscule school of history: a medieval count. a decaying castle, a bunch of worn out parchment and the like. While I do recognise that much of history is based on such painstaking research, I personally do not find such history terribly exiting. This is not to say that minute analysis of documents cannot be interesting. One has only to read the book by M T Clanchy, From Memery to Written Records to realise that medieval historiography can be as much of a paGE TURNER AS ANY CONTEMPORARY NOVEL.
I recently picked by Jared Diamond's Guns Grms and Steel in a bookstore that rightly calls itself landmark. I had read a review of his recent book Collapse in the Economist. Jared Diamond is an anthropologist probably teaching in one of the West coast Universities . This book is refreshing in that there is hardy any of the soul destroying jagon so dear the American anthropologists. In this Diamond is in good company: Marshal Sahlins learnt to write like a historian towards the fag end of his teaching career. If one reads his Stone Age Economics and compare the style with his Islands of History you can hardly believe that the same person wrote both books. However, Sahlins son Peter Sahins writes with elegance and polish and yes, Sahlins junior is a trained historian.
The basic theme of Jared Diamond in his Guns, Germs and Steel is simple. Mankind over a period of nearly a millennium learnt to remove the toxicity from a number of plasntsd by selective breeding and by carefully collecting the mutated grains. I was surprised to learn that the humble potato had once been highly toxic.In a similar manner human being too developed resistance to viruses. When the Spanish conquerors reached the so called New World they brought with them a whole range of new diseases for which them native peoples had no immunity. In the pan demics that followed the entire population was killed off. Is the AIDS virus something similar.
This blog is a random collection of thoughts on the World, my life, my loves and my politics. I am a historian and an animal right's activist.
Thursday, September 15, 2005
The Da Vinci Code and Historians
Dan Browns novel the Da Vinci Code is a run away success. The book has been widely read and it is unfortunate that most people will form their opinion of early Christianity by reading this interesting but outrageous book. Jesus Christ is venerated as a saviour by billions of people and the basis of the Christian faith lies in the belief that He died on the Cross as a supreme aacrifice for the sins of mankind. One may or may not agree with this notion but no one, least of all a novelist has the right ot insult this belief. Further the fact that Mary Magdalen was only a companion of Jesus and probably the most compassionate of all his followers. To transform this lonely, tragic figure into the wife or partner of Christ is not only unhistorical but also insulting to peoples belief. Of course, I do not believe that she was what the Roman Catholic chruch made her out to be, but that is another story. I thimk the whole plot senationalises certain conspiracy theories and therefore while it makes interesting reading it is certainly not literature.
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