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AdmiralHip's profile
Dr C. M. Bromstick🧹, Dublin
Dr C. M. Bromstick🧹, Dublin
Dr C. M. Bromstick 🧹, Dublin
@AdmiralHip

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Dr C. M. Bromstick 🧹, Dublin

@AdmiralHip

Early Medieval historian: Ireland & Britain, kingship, landscapes, mentalities | knitting, video games, bread | ND | disabled | she/her | #BlackLivesMatter

Ireland
Joined December 2011

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    1. Jack Z‏ @stmarnock69 10 Nov 2019
      Replying to @stmarnock69 @DollyJorgensen and

      2) the investment in the term seems to be disproportionate. Which leads me to suspect bad faith on the part of some (not all) who are most vociferous in their desire for its retention. I believe the wider cultural context and history of the term informs this more than a concern

      1 reply 0 retweets 4 likes
    2. Jack Z‏ @stmarnock69 10 Nov 2019
      Replying to @stmarnock69 @DollyJorgensen and

      for terminological exactitude. AS a term has undoubted utility, however one is prompted to question whether that utility can be weighed against its wider cultural misappropriation. I believe it cannot. There are good arguments on the question to be sure.

      1 reply 0 retweets 5 likes
    3. Dr C. M. Bromstick 🧹, Dublin‏ @AdmiralHip 10 Nov 2019
      Replying to @stmarnock69 @DollyJorgensen and

      As someone in the field, Anglo-Saxon has a limited contemporary usage and people of that time didn’t ID as such. And just because it’s in schoolbooks etc doesn’t mean we shouldn’t move past it. There are plenty of terms we have gotten rid of.

      3 replies 1 retweet 12 likes
    4. Dr C. M. Bromstick 🧹, Dublin‏ @AdmiralHip 10 Nov 2019
      Replying to @AdmiralHip @stmarnock69 and

      And that argument is silly because it assumes that we don’t already make changes or advocate for changes in scholarship. When I was in my undergrad my archaeology textbooks became incorrect the year I purchased them

      2 replies 1 retweet 9 likes
    5. Dr C. M. Bromstick 🧹, Dublin‏ @AdmiralHip 10 Nov 2019
      Replying to @AdmiralHip @stmarnock69 and

      Because the Neanderthal genome sequencing was released 6 months after I purchased that textbook, which said that we have no relation to Neanderthals. Also, people were saying Anglo-Saxon England. Removing “Anglo-Saxon” and replacing it with “Early Medieval”

      1 reply 1 retweet 10 likes
    6. Dr C. M. Bromstick 🧹, Dublin‏ @AdmiralHip 10 Nov 2019
      Replying to @AdmiralHip @stmarnock69 and

      Is in fact more inclusive of the multitudes of identities at the time.

      2 replies 0 retweets 7 likes
    7. Jack Z‏ @stmarnock69 10 Nov 2019
      Replying to @AdmiralHip @DollyJorgensen and

      My way of thinking is that tying a period to a contemporary geographical area has greater utility than calling a period “Anglo-Saxon”. No Jutes? No Irish? No Ramano-Britons? England has always been a place of many peoples. IMHO if we wish to label that period, geographical

      2 replies 0 retweets 5 likes
    8. Jack Z‏ @stmarnock69 10 Nov 2019
      Replying to @stmarnock69 @AdmiralHip and

      designation has greater utility than a fictive imagined community which Anglo-Saxon clearly denotes.

      1 reply 0 retweets 6 likes
    9. Prof Dolly Jørgensen‏ @DollyJorgensen 10 Nov 2019
      Replying to @stmarnock69 @AdmiralHip and

      I’ll only add to all this that I acknowledge the problem - but I disagree w proposed solution. I’m inspired by work of Sara Bond who has countered appropriation of white classical statues w writing on polychromy & racial diversity in Rome. To me it’s better approach.

      2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
    10. Jack Z‏ @stmarnock69 10 Nov 2019
      Replying to @DollyJorgensen @AdmiralHip and

      It is an interesting and important conversation to have. I’m an admirer of @SarahEBond work and I think classicists have much to say about how language is deployed. I am not a historian so can’t speak from a knowledge base. I’m also a white person who has come to this discussion

      2 replies 0 retweets 3 likes
      Dr C. M. Bromstick 🧹, Dublin‏ @AdmiralHip 10 Nov 2019
      Replying to @stmarnock69 @DollyJorgensen and

      I like her work too. But she is also advocating for the historical accuracy of the polychromatic statues and that the Roman Empire was diverse. We are arguing that the term Anglo-Saxon was not very historically accurate, and we have the sources to prove it.

      6:41 AM - 10 Nov 2019
      • 5 Likes
      • Aneirin Pendragon | The Ancient Geeko-Roman Dr. Nicole Lopez-Jantzen Axel Folio, PhD, BFF of Mr. Bloodaxe 🐬🏰💦 Jack Z
      0 replies 0 retweets 5 likes
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        2. Dr. Dorothy Kim‏ @dorothyk98 10 Nov 2019
          Replying to @SarahEBond @AdmiralHip and

          It appears you were being used as a shield to keep a racist term on the books. You have to love how white European scholars imagine none of our fields and those dealing with white supremacy issues never talk to each other or support each other.

          0 replies 0 retweets 10 likes
        3. End of conversation

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