I might just to be honest.
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Okay so in an effort to try and pivot to talking about my research on here I am going to start using my full name.
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And since it’s been awhile: I am a PhD student focussing on sacral kingship in early medieval Ireland and Britain. I examine the ways that people perceive kingship as an ideology.
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My work is interdisciplinary, as I use history, archaeology, and anthropology. This presents several problems.
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The ways that different disciplines view the past can be hard to reconcile. For example: understanding medieval mentalities. I’ve received pushback on this from some archaeologists and historians (despite the impact of Marc Bloch and the annalistes).
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Conversely, the reflex to assign sacral attributes to everything can take away from understanding sacrality. Sometimes a horse is just a horse. What’s important is trying to find out when it’s more than that.
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On the OTHER hand, ritual isn’t only grand, not just inherently related to religion in a direct sense.
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Superstitious actions can be described as a ritual in a way, even if the religious/sacral aspect of them has been forgotten or lessened.
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Like avoiding fairy trees, or tying ribbons on their branches as an offering.
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It’s complicated as is, and it is made even more complicated by 19thc and early 20thc discussions of “pre-Christian” religions. Lots of nonsense there in the old historiography.
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Anyway, this has been a bit of a ramble but these are some of the problems I have to deal with in my research.
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End of conversation
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