Monograph fuel... fresh Warsaw pączki |
I spent this
weekend in Warsaw ,
seeing a major new exhibition on the Jagiellonian dynasty. Although I was last in Poland only
back in May, it was a good boost to the monograph-writing, a shot in the arm,
to have another trip over there. On a frivolous note, it enabled me to stock up
on my favourite Warsaw
rose-jam Polish doughnuts, from the legendary 19C cake-shop Blickle, and I’m
munching my way through these as I plough on with the current chapter.
There are great
benefits to writing a monograph about a country from the outside – geographical
and (in my case, some) cultural distance can create fresh, challenging new
perspectives on old stories. But it’s also draining having to constantly tell
colleagues and students here in western Europe that 16C Poland , and its neighbours in Central
Europe , are major states which we should know and care about as
historians; that this is something worth writing a monograph about. So, even
though Warsaw itself (only a provincial capital in the early 16C) doesn’t
feature very much in the Elusive Church
story, it was refreshing, and reaffirming, to be reminded in the noise and
bustle of that city that this is a major European country, with a big past. It
was good to see how unapologetically that 16C Central European past was
celebrated in the Polish-Czech-German Europa
Jagiellonica exhibition. So maybe there’s an appendix to the book writing rules – semi-regular trips to the locations of your research subject, to
re-ground yourself in the reality of what you’re writing about, and to provoke
reflections on what happened to those places in the historical longer-term. And to remind you once again - centre and periphery are largely a matter of subjective perspective.
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