Select Bibliography of Cantor's Publications
- The Medieval World 300-1500 ('Norman Cantor, Civilization of the Middle Ages, p. 2')
- Perspectives on the European Past
- The Civilization of the Middle Ages A revision of his earlier Medieval History: the Life and Death of a Civilization (1963) (ISBN 0-06-017033-6)
- How to Study History (with Richard I. Schneider) (1967) A textbook that lays out fundamental methods and principles, including the uses of primary and secondary sources
- The English
- Western Civilization: Its Genesis and Destiny
- The Meaning of the Middle Ages
- Inventing the Middle Ages: The Lives, Works and Ideas of the Great Medievalists of the Twentieth Century, (1991) A historiography of views of the Middle Ages, in twenty vitae of seminal historians and other shapers of contemporary perception, including C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien
- Medieval Lives
- Medieval Society, 400-1450
- The Age of Protest (1971)
- Twentieth Century Medieval Culture
- The Sacred Chain: History of the Jews (1994) Harper/Collins
- The American Century: Varieties of Culture in Modern Times (1997)
- In the Wake of the Plague: The Black Death and the World It Made (2001)
- Antiquity (2003)
- The Last Knight: The Twilight of the Middle Ages and the Birth of the Modern Era (2004) A look at John of Gaunt
- Alexander the Great (2005) Published posthumously by HarperCollins (ISBN 0-06-057012-1)
Cantor published a memoir in 2002, Inventing Norman Cantor: Confessions of a Medievalist.
Read more about this topic: Norman Cantor
Famous quotes containing the words select and/or publications:
“Why does he not know how to select servants? The ordinary procedure of the nineteenth century is that when a powerful and noble personage encounters a man of feeling, he kills, exiles, imprisons or so humiliates him that the other, like a fool, dies of grief.”
—Stendhal [Marie Henri Beyle] (17831842)
“Dr. Calder [a Unitarian minister] said of Dr. [Samuel] Johnson on the publications of Boswell and Mrs. Piozzi, that he was like Actaeon, torn to pieces by his own pack.”
—Horace Walpole (17171797)