"Byzantine Matters is a fighting book. It may well be that the title was chosen to echo Cornel West's Race Matters. In a more restrained and academic vein than West--but with no less tenacity--Cameron points to an injustice: the absence of Byzantium from the historical consciousness of Western Europe... Seen from the mean streets of university and state policies in the United Kingdom, Cameron's book makes depressing reading. But seen as a program for Byzantine studies in themselves, it is a crackling description of an intellectual trajectory."--Peter Brown, New York Review of Books "No one has written about the history and culture of Byzantium with such luminous intelligence as Averil Cameron."--Peter Thornemann, Times Literary Supplement "This is a robust, insider critique of the field by an important and highly influential scholar with a formidable international reputation... Four elegant chapters, dealing in turn with empire, identity, visual culture and religion, demonstrate with clarity and economy the extent to which too much recent work on Byzantium continues to wall itself off from new lines of inquiry... Cameron's feisty and provocative manifesto should immediately be placed under every Byzantinist's pillow."--Christopher Kelly, Times Literary Supplement "This is a must-read for anyone studying Byzantium... [I]t will be very useful to students and enthusiasts of the empire, as well as medievalists and late antiquarians."--Library Journal "Byzantine Matters is a deceptively small and slight volume in appearance, but it is a book on a mission. Taking five interlocking themes, it sets out to do nothing less than make its readers realise why Byzantium is not something long ago and far away but something that should matter to us all... I, for one, as a feminist scholar working on Byzantine women, have gained and learnt a huge amount from her and her work."--Liz James, Anglo-Hellenic Review "[A]ttractively produced... [A] more distinctive book, accessible but also directed at the field itself."--Shaun Tougher, History Today "Cameron makes her case, as one would expect, with eloquence, insight, erudition and power. There is a great deal in what she argues."--Peter N. Bell, Acta Classica "I found the subject fascinating and Professor Cameron's arguments most persuasive. It has certainly inspired me to investigate the subject and to try to read some of the introductory texts recommended by her."--Rosemary Conely, Open History "Not everyone will agree with the judgments in this brief but stimulating book, but it provides perfect reading for societies, programs, and departments seeking to join the conversation about Byzantine matters."--Derek Krueger, Project Muse "It is a book about academics for academics, and valuable for the huge range of up-to-the minute secondary literature that the author takes on board."--Paul Magdalino, Speculum "This little book provides much to reflect and ponder on. It is an impassioned manifesto aimed at the field (pointing to future research directions) but also beyond, a cry for Byzantium to be better understood and appreciated."--Shaun Tougher, Histos "It is that rare gem, a profoundly learned book that may be read by the interested amateur in an evening."--Benjamin Garstad, Sixteenth Century Journal "Cameron's book is a welcome contribution, offering a stimulus for further discussion on the future of Byzantine Studies."--Gerasimos Merianos, Al-Masaq