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  1. Apr 14, 2015 · Historical fiction allows us to “ understand the extremes of human behaviour.”. The novel can explore “various ways of facing, understanding and living with the horrific events in the past.”. Historical fiction helps us retain the past. Noble purposes indeed. Something to think about the next time you enjoy historical fiction.

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      Her blog was chosen as one of the favourite historical...

  2. May 16, 2022 · History, like our memories, gets rewritten with each retelling, gets reshaped by the consciousness of each generation. We bend and frame historical facts to justify wars, exploitation, revenge. Or to evoke patriotic resistance, heroism, and the will to survive. Writers and poets, too, have done it for centuries.

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  3. The theory goes that Historic Fiction follows events and people from the past, think ‘Wolf Hall’ by Hilary Mantel, an intricate account of the life of Thomas Cromwell; whereas Fictional History is based solely in the time period, with invented characters such as ‘The Wolf Den’ by Elodie Harper. Neither is more inherently good or bad ...

  4. Jan 20, 2022 · Two elusive concepts: narrative and fiction. The subjects of history and literature at Örebro University started the research environment Narration, Life, Meaning, in 2007. In seminars and workshops scholars from these and other academic disciplines have discussed methodological issues relating to the study of narratives and to narratology.

  5. Sep 14, 2016 · Cliché, perhaps, but historical fiction does ‘make history alive.’. Through narrative, details, dialogue, scene description, a reader feels more connected with the story then through a straight-up historic text. Makes you WANT to read the ‘real story.’. Upon my next bookstore outing, I will be picking up a copy of Houdini’s biography.

  6. Indeed, historical fiction shapes popular understandings of the past. Of course, historical fiction can exploit the past—reducing the past to an exotic stage set. It frequently romanticizes, aestheticizes and simplifies the past and often include many anachronisms. Still other examples emphasize “the venal, the grim, the shadowy and the ...

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  8. Nov 10, 2016 · The power of the fictional account stems from the invented world that spreads beyond the narrow stream of words that we read upon the page, from its desire to force the characters to act on a set that is loyal to sequential time. On every page of the historical novel, a clock is ticking, even if we do not hear it.

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