Professor Alex Sanmark & Dr Oisín Plumb Receive Great Review for their Book

We’re thrilled to see UHI Institute for Northern Studies Dr. Oisín Plumb and Professor Alexandra Sanmark’s exceptional work, 'Alternative Facts and Plausible Fictions in the Northern European Past - How Politics & Culture have Written and Rewritten History,' receiving high praise in 'The Medieval Review.'

The use of the past for contemporary purposes has been a feature of historical and archaeological investigation from ancient times. This ‘politicization of the past’ is often associated with, at best, an inadvertent detachment from an objective use of evidence, and at worst, its wilful misuse. Such use of the past is perhaps most evident in the construction of narratives of nations and ethnic groups — particularly in relation to origins or the perceived ‘golden ages’ of peoples.

This book seeks to assess the role played by different ideologies in the shaping of the past, from early times up until the present day, in the interpretation of the history and archaeology of Northern Europe, whether in Northern Europe itself or further afield. It also considers how those who research, interpret, and present the Northern European past should respond to such uses. The chapters drawn together here explore key questions, asking how contemporary ideologies of identity have shaped the past, what measures should be taken to discourage an inaccurate understanding of the past, and if scholars should draw on the past in order to counter racism and xenophobia, or if this can itself lead to potentially dangerous misunderstandings of history.

'This admirable volume addresses recurrent cultural questions about how the past, whether recent or far distant, has been thought to matter when interpreted in subsequent times, including our own.....the present volume makes an admirable (and, I expect, durable) contribution to the important process of looking backward at several major fabrications—here skilfully recognised as such—of the medieval European world across different time-gaps and multiple cultural perspectives.' Caroline D. Eckhardt, in The Medieval Review, May 2026, [online]
The volume is published by Brepols in The North Atlantic Book Series.