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Paul Jacobsthal'sEarly Celtic Art, his anonymous co-author, and National Socialism: new evidence from the archives

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Colleagues who find the current climate inhibiting to pure scholarship and authors eager to see their name in print should read this: an ultimately uplifting account of Jacobsthal's struggle to establish one of the foundations of European archaeology at a time of grave political persecution. Not the least of the achievements of this paper is the definitive rehabilitation of the lost co-author ofEarly Celtic Art, Eduard Neuffer, whose name never appeared on the cover and whose contribution was perforce unrecognised.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: Paul Jacobsthal'sEarly Celtic Art, his anonymous co-author, and National Socialism: new evidence from the archives
Description:
Colleagues who find the current climate inhibiting to pure scholarship and authors eager to see their name in print should read this: an ultimately uplifting account of Jacobsthal's struggle to establish one of the foundations of European archaeology at a time of grave political persecution.
Not the least of the achievements of this paper is the definitive rehabilitation of the lost co-author ofEarly Celtic Art, Eduard Neuffer, whose name never appeared on the cover and whose contribution was perforce unrecognised.

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