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In Search of England: Journeys into the English Past
 
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In Search of England: Journeys into the English Past [Paperback]

Michael Wood (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 6, 2001
England is the birthplace of many immortal legends told around the world: King Arthur and Camelot, the Holy Grail, Robin Hood, the mysterious Isle of Avalon. But are these famous stories based on historical events and actual people? And what do they tell us about the character and origins of the Anglo-Saxon world, a culture that helped shape American identity?
In his absorbing new book, Michael Wood examines the roots of English history. Peeling back the layers of literary and oral material that have accumulated over the ages, he offers a fascinating series of rich stories--part history, part myth--that, directly or indirectly, touch on questions of English history and identity. He looks back at the legends surrounding Alfred the Great, King Athelstan, the lost library of Glastonbury, and more.
Wood's emphasis is the Early Middle Ages, and the first two sections of the book offer deep excursions into particular moments in the history of that era. In addition to recounting some well-known legends, Wood considers the manuscripts and other primary sources of historical information on which they are based, assessing the validity of existing documentation, fleshing out historical contexts, and considering the treatment throughout history of these stories by famous writers, poets, and moviemakers.
In the third part of In Search of England, Wood writes about places that illuminate interesting aspects of early England: Tinsley Wood, near Sheffield, which has been claimed as the site of Athelstan's great victory against the Celts in 937; a farmhouse in Devon which has been occupied since Domesday and possibly long before; and the village of Peatling Magna in Leicestershire, scene of an extraordinary confrontation with King Henry III in 1265. These are the places and events that offer a complementary version of the history that is discussed earlier in the book.
In Search of England is published at a significant moment. With the European union, and with assertions of independence within the United Kingdom, questions about English national identity have become increasingly topical both there and abroad. Wood offers a potent and revealing account of the origins of a culture that has had a significant impact worldwide. His narrative is a rich unfolding of history and legend reaching to the present day, and a delightfully readable meditation on the roots of the Anglo-Saxon world.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

From the popular television historian whose previous books include In Search of the Trojan War and In the Footsteps of Alexander the Great comes this study of a pressing question: Now that Britain seems to be an increasingly meaningless concept, what does it mean to be English? Michael Wood traces an answer through many of the most cherished national myths, such as Robin Hood, King Arthur, Alfred the Great, and the mysteries of Glastonbury. As you would expect from Wood, he ranges about over the whole of England, rather than sticking to the obvious places. He visits Tinsley Wood near Sheffield, claimed as the site of Athelstan's great victory over the Celts in A.D. 937. He finds a farmhouse in Devon that has been continuously occupied for 1000 years and a village in Leicestershire where the local peasantry confronted the king's soldiers in 1265 to tell them that they were violating the rights of "the common people of England." The book also boasts a wonderful, judicious collection of reproductions of old posters and paintings showing how English forebears, particularly the Victorians, imaginatively recreated the country's past in their own image. Timely, readable, and fascinating, this is popular history at its very best. --Christopher Hart, Amazon.co.uk --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

"A collection of illuminating essays...with scholarly zeal, journalistic skepticism and narrative flair." -- New York Times Book Review

"A thoughtful meditation on the roots of the Anglo-Saxon world." -- Chicago Tribune

"A thoughtful meditation on the roots of the Anglo-Saxon world." -- Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel

"Better than any historian for decades, Wood brings home not just the ways in which buildings, landscapes and written texts may be read, but the sensual beauty of encounters with them...As a cameo of modern Englishness, it is brilliant; and if Michael Wood claims the cover picture, he lets this man have the last word." -- Times Literary Supplement

"Timely, readable, and fascinating, this is popular history at its very best." -- Amazon.com

"Timely, readable, and fascinating, this is popular history at its very best." -- Amazon.com

"[B]rings home . . . the ways in which buildings, landscapes and written texts may be read [and] . . . the sensual beauty of . . . them." -- Times Literary Supplement

With scholarly zeal, journalistic skepticism and narrative flair, Wood, a veritable archaeologist of myth, examines key iconic figures, places and texts that have come to represent the idea and ideals of the English. -- The New York Times Book Review, Sherie Posesorski --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: University of California Press (August 6, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0520232186
  • ISBN-13: 978-0520232181
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,246,624 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars THERE'LL ALWAYS BE AN ENGLAND -- AT LEAST FOR NOW, August 2, 2000
The English and television were made for each other. Although the sun has set on the British Empire, a peculiar sort of English genius for analyzing and explaining history emerged after WWII. It is a genius that flowered because of television. Michael Wood, trained as an historian at Oxford (note that the flyleaf of his book on the Trojan War says his master's degree is in 20th century history while Maryland Public Television claims he was trained as a medievalist), is the latest in a line of charismatic English (his surname ought to be Anglo-Saxon) telehistorians. He is both scholar and journalist. My introduction to Michael Wood was through his series, "In Search of the Trojan War," in which Wood began as a sort of detective, looking for the people and places behind Homer's epic, and, who, along the way, taught the public- television-public a great deal about history and archaeology and how computers can be used by practitioners of both disciplines. Although there does not seem to be a video tie-in with Wood's latest book, this is, essentially, a book for the public-television-public: educated, curious people who don't mind the felling of an idol or two. It is well-written and witty, erudite but not overbearingly so. This is not a book for people who want a quick, general overview of history. Wood seemed to have two purposes: to examine what it means to be English at the present time and to look into the myths that have made England England. Which means that it is also not a book for the legions of New Agers, the Celtic Revivialists and sentimental spiritualists of any stripe. He is, however, fair to both Celticists and Anglo-Saxonists: he can find neither an historic Arthur nor an historic Robin Hood. We need populizers: people like Wood with specialized training in a discipline who can bring their knowledge to a wide audience. I was trained as an historian at Harvard, where a professor answered the question, "Do you think Arthur lived?" with the story of Dunstan's finding of Arthur's tomb complete with lead placque at Glastonbury. It is perhaps important to the future of the English nation that people not believe that the body of a tall man and his blonde wife were found in a remote abbey in the Middle Ages. It is important that we know exactly who Alfred the Great really was. It is also important that our current charismatic English telehistorian is a real scholar and a gentleman with a fine sense of humor. Read this book.
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Absorbing mind-candy for the medievalist, November 25, 2001
I always pick up Wood's newest work in English history with high anticipation and I've never been disappointed yet. This volume is a collection of semi-independent chapters collected under three themes. "Myth and History" includes essays that discuss the historical notion of the "Norman yoke," an exceptional piece on the meaning of "Englishness," and three good summary updates on the status of research into King Arthur, Robin Hood, and Glastonbury as Avalon. "Manuscripts and Mysteries" is a fascinating series of paleographical and bibliological essays on John Leland's visit to the library of Glastonbury Abbey on the eve of Henry VIII's dissolution of the monasteries, a re-examination of the authenticity of Asser's life of King Alfred, a reconstitution of the lost "Life of Athelstan," and an investigation of the peregrinations of a little psalter now in the British Library. "Landscapes and People" covers the artifactual side of English history, with the stories of the last bowl-turner in England (using pre-Conquest technology well into the 20th century), Tinsley Wood in South Yorkshire as the possibly location of the key Battle of Brunanburh, Bury Barton in north Devon as a probable surviving Roman/Anglo-Saxon farmstead, the resistence by the villagers of Peatling Magna in 1265 against the king following the Battle of Evesham (the peasants took the king's Marshal to court!), the story of Bede's tenure at Jarrow and what has happened to the site since, and a thoroughly fascinating genealogical story involving the exact origins of the ex-slaves of Barbuda. To anyone with the slightest interest in English medieval history and society, this book will be a rich and very satisfying experience.
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17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Author Makes You Think With Him, August 22, 2000
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As an American I am experiencing a cutting sense of loss of cultural companionship as society seems determined to aim for the lowest common denominator in the media. I feel loss as noisy interstates plow through once quiet countryside, as houses in my historic neighborhood fall prey to careless landlords and tenants while homeowners rip up fields and woods for treeless MacMansion estates. Storefronts downtown are empty as franchises line higher traffic roads. I used to think, Oh to be in England where they leave things in place. That's why I bought this book, only to learn Wood is as bereft over his culture as I am about mine. There is much I did not expect in this book; especially, I did not expect the author to walk me through his evaluation processes as he pieces together evidence to show what is left or what we can know about England. He puts the reader to work thinking with him. It was a good exercise, though a bit challenging because Wood was really speaking to an English audience and assumed some knowledge I didn't have (I found a chronological list of monarchs on the Internet and a more detailed map which helped). Wood also reminds us gently, at the end, that as sorry our losses, life and history are evolving, we can't expect to freeze life. So right. So what you get out of this book is perspective and an interesting look at how a historian thinks.
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