Civilisations kicks off this week on BBC 2. Now in the plural, it will be presented by Simon Schama, Mary Beard and David Olusoga and will cast wider and further back in time than Kenneth Clark's personal and narrow perspective, with which it will inevitably be compared. Memory plays tricks, and having watched the classic series again, they are less an example of television's golden age as a rather indulgent window into Clark's taste. Although Clark's commentary is entertainingly idiosyncratic, I found the programmes lacking the substance one expects of the grandiose title Civilisation. Perhaps it's time to watch again and reappraise Bronowski's Ascent of Man.
David Cannadine spoke refreshingly on R4
about the porosity of cultures and the distortions that occur through categorising people according to which civilisation they ostensibly belong. Perhaps the new programmes will adopt a more holistic perspective of the impossible brief. I confess to being rather disappointed when the presenters for the new programmes were first announced, but have since found Mary Beard's series on the Romans, currently repeated on BBC4, to be informative and entertaining, and so look forward to her contributions.
David Cannadine spoke refreshingly on R4
about the porosity of cultures and the distortions that occur through categorising people according to which civilisation they ostensibly belong. Perhaps the new programmes will adopt a more holistic perspective of the impossible brief. I confess to being rather disappointed when the presenters for the new programmes were first announced, but have since found Mary Beard's series on the Romans, currently repeated on BBC4, to be informative and entertaining, and so look forward to her contributions.
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