Certainly, because the original meaning arose from ignorance and prejudice.
But it’s misleading for a modern historian to say that the Dark Ages are so called because of paucity of written records.
The older meaning of Dark Ages has to to be respected even if it was prejudiced. It is a historical fact unto itself,and to put a different spin on it is misleading revisionism. It would be better to just drop the title altogether then to re-define it.
Durant’s work is full of secularist prejudice and relies on secondary scholarship that was by and large already outdated when Durant wrote.
Read his discussion of Indian culture in the first volume–the condescension is almost enough to make one throw up.
What do you mean by secondary scholarship? He used a great deal of primary sources.
I don’t have his first volume,just The Age of Faith and The Renaissance. I am very sensitive to secularist prejudice in historians,but I haven’t encountered anything condescending or offensive in his writing. He is very fair and tolerant.
And when writing about the Reformation–the period I know best–he makes lots of inaccurate claims. He is to be admired for attempting to write the whole history of the human race, but by necessity that kind of thing is going to be highly imperfect and is going to go out of date very quickly (unless it’s a work of real genius like Toynbee’s or Spengler’s, in which case it remains valuable for its insights even though the specific interpretations may be overturned on many points–Durant is simply not in that class).
Toynbee and Spengler were philosophical historians.
Ker wrote in 1904. He’s one of the pioneers of the study of early medieval literature–19th-century scholars regarded the era with almost complete contempt by and large–but naturally he would still have a good deal of that attitude even as he helped to overcome it.
Ker obviously didn’t have any prejudice toward the literature of the Dark Ages.
Exactly. And as knowledge has accumulated, it’s become clearer that our previous contempt for this period was based to a great extent on prejudice–both Protestant/secularist prejudice against the Church, and classicist prejudice against anything following the glories of Greece and Rome.
Therefore, people would now generally say that the word “dark” simply shouldn’t be applied to a whole period like this. But since it’s well established in the literature, and since our knowledge is still (and probably always will be unless we invent a time machine) pretty spotty given that we’re talking about some 500 years of history, the term has been re-defined, as you note.
What’s wrong with that?
Like I said,it’s misleading to re-define the meaning of Dark Ages. And to me,it isn’t even convincing. Since we have so much detailed information about that period,they are no longer so dark to us. We don’t have much in the way of written accounts from the Heroic Age of Greece,the Heroic Age of Celtic Ireland,the early republic of Rome,and Cretan and Etruscan civilization at their height – but no one calls them dark ages. And why? Because aesthetically,they have the marks of civilization. So why should anyone say that the Dark Ages seem dark for the paucity of written accounts? That doesn’t make sense. As I said
in post 89,imagine if historians started to say that the Enlightenment was so called because of the abundance of written accounts for that period.