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Byzantine Studies at the Beginning of the Twenty-first Century
Alice-Mary Talbot, Dumbarton
Oaks
At the outset let me say how pleased I am as a Byzantinist to have been
included in a volume on the status of medieval studies at the beginning
of the twenty-first century. As the lone representative of my discipline,
however, in the company of so many distinguished Western medievalists,
I must also confess to empathizing with Sir Steven Runciman, who wrote
in the 1950 preface to his History of the Crusades, "It may seem
unwise for one British pen to compete with the massed typewriters of the
United States." Perhaps one could rephrase that sentence to read, "it
may seem unwise for one Byzantinist pen to compete with the massed computers
of Western medievalists," since I will necessarily have to present a much
more wide-ranging and superficial survey than my Western colleagues.
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