The Bright Ages

A New History of Medieval Europe

Hardcover, 320 pages

Published Dec. 7, 2021 by Harper.

ISBN:
978-0-06-298089-2
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

Love to see historians stand against white supremacy

I'm never going to be mad about a history book written by pasty authors who call out white supremacy, islamophobia, antisemitism, etc. Plus the authors went out of their way to talk about women from the time period. All of these things are wins in my books.

The overall structure of the book is more or less chronological, but when the authors zoom in two specific moments during the Middle Ages, there still aren't a lot of details. It was enough for me in audiobook form, but I can see it being disappointing for somebody who wants to really do a deep dive into the time period. I personally liked it a lot though and had a few good chuckles while reading.

It does look like the two authors got together again for another book that talks about a specific event during the Middle Ages that I definitely …

Breezy, interesting, flawed

This book is a revisiting of Medieval Europe that calls into question many myths and misconceptions of the time. It's certainly interesting, and was an easy enough read, but it's only 300 pages long and covers about 1000 years of history, so it doesn't get very deep into many subjects. I think in part because of the brevity, the book will often quickly mention some collection of people other than western european christians, only to veer back into largely describing this period of history in terms of christians and western europeans. The book claims to be explicitly anti-white supremacist, and while I don't doubt the intention is there, I think the book doesn't succeed as well as I would have liked. I'm glad I read it but mostly because I'll probably try and find other more detailed books about the period.

Review of 'The Bright Ages' on 'Goodreads'

If you go by the pithy summary you may assume this is going to be a tale of how wonderful and perfect the Middle Ages were unlike the pejorative "Dark Ages" term we have long applied. You'd be wrong. This is not a book trying to conjure up some overly simplistic counter-narrative to the overly simplistic "Dark Ages" narrative. It instead tries to weave a detailed view of how things were throughout Europe, Africa, and Asia. They do not try to imply it was all lollipops and gumdrops. Then again, neither was any other period of human history. Humans and our relationships are messy therefore our histories are messy. This captures that aspect while still rescuing ourselves from the CW we were taught of, "Rome was amazing but fell, then Europe went into a horrible dark period where no one remembered anything and scraped by in unimaginably poor conditions until …

avatar for manuelfherrador

rated it