The Celts : the construction of a myth

Bibliographic Information

The Celts : the construction of a myth

Malcolm Chapman

Macmillan Press , St. Martin's Press, 1992

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  • : us

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 299-328) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Celts are commonly considered to be one of the great peoples of Europe, with continuous racial, cultural and linguistic genealogy from the Iron Age to the modern-day 'Celtic fringe'. This book shows, in contrast, that the Celts, as they have been known and understood over two thousand years, are simply the 'other' of the dominant cultural and political traditions of Europe. It is this continuous 'otherness' which lends them apparent continuity and substance.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements - Preface - Who are the Celts? - 'A Branch of Indo-European' - Calling People Names - 'A Wave of Barbarians...' - Celts into Welshmen - Celtic Continuity: Language - Celtic Continuity: People - Celtic Continuity: Culture - Romanticism - Classification and Culture Meeting - The Celts and the Classics - Gerald of Wales - The Modern Celts - Ker Ys - The Heroic Age - Notes - References - Index

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