Living History Fiction

Authors

  • Kim Wilson Macquarie University, Australia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21153/pecl2010vol20no1art1151

Keywords:

historical fiction, talking books, time-slip novels

Abstract

During my research into historical fiction for children and young adult readers I came across a range of texts that relied on a living or lived experience of history to frame the historical story. These novels were similar to the time-slip narrative; however, not all examples used the traditional convention of time-slippage. I wanted to bundle these novels together - 'time-slip' novels included - as examples of 'living history' narratives because they appeared from the outset as a distinct literary form requiring particular reading strategies. These texts, which I will refer to as Living history novels, require readers to align uncritically with modern perception. Readers are persuasively invited to assume that the modern characters' perception of the past is authentic because it has been formed by a lived experience of history. In Living history novels, readers are positioned to perceive both the strengths and weaknesses of past and present times, ultimately reconciling the two in a present that faces chronologically forwards. Modern focalising characters in Living history fiction place modern perception in a superior relationship to that of the past.This sub-genre of historical novels is distinctive in its strong and consistent modern character focalisation and point of view. The Living history novel creates a confluence of past and present, be it physically or psychically. Characters are variously conveyed from a generalised present, or past, to an explicit historical period or event. The Living history novel is distinctive in its intense character introversion, quest journey and self-discovery. The most important outcome of the living history experience is that characters learn something significant about themselves. Because the story is about the modern character's quest and self realisation, the past is consistently perceived from their point of view. Modern characters are transported in time and readers are only rarely invited to see the past from a past point of view.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Author Biography

  • Kim Wilson, Macquarie University, Australia

    Kim Wilson has recently completed a Ph.D. in English, specializing in children's literature, at Macquarie University (Australia). Her research examined the ideological framing of children’s historical fiction that has been published over the last thirty to forty years. She has published in Journal of International Children’ s Research, Children’ s Literature Association Quarterly, and Papers.

References

Alexander, Goldie (1991) Mavis Road Medley. Sydney, Margaret Hamilton.

Bell, Hilary (1996) Mirror Mirror. Sydney, Hodder Headline Australia.

Cooper, Susan (2000) King of Shadows. London, Puffin Books.

Culler, Jonathan (1988) Framing the Sign: Criticism and its Institutions. Oxford, Basil Blackwell.

Daniels, Cory (1999) Mystery at Devon House. Melbourne, Lothian Books.

Elias, Amy J. (2005) ‘Metahistorical Romance, the Historical Sublime and Dialogic History’, Rethinking History 9, 2/3, 159-172.

Farmer, Penelope (1985) Charlotte Sometimes. London, The Bodley Head [1969].

French, Jackie (1998) Daughter of the Regiment. Sydney, Angus and Robertson.

French, Jackie (2006) Macbeth and Son. Sydney, Angus and Robertson.

French, Jackie (2000) Somewhere Around the Corner. Sydney, Angus and Robertson.

Gough, Sue (1993) Wyrd. St Lucia, University of Queensland Press.

Handler, Richard & Saxton, William (1988) ‘Dyssimulation: Reflexivity, Narrative, & the quest for Authenticity in ‘Living History”’, Cultural Anthropology 3, 3, 242-260.

Katz, Welwyn Wilton (1996) Out of the Dark. New York, Margaret K. McElderry.

Kelleher, Victor (1988) Baily’ s Bones. Ringwood, Vic, Penguin.

Le Goff, Jacques (1992) History and Memory. Trans. Steven Rendell & Elizabeth Claman. New York, Columbia University Press [1977].

Metzenthen, David (2003) Boys of Blood and Bone. Ringwood, Vic, Penguin.

Park, Ruth (1982) Playing Beatie Bow. Ringwood, Vic, Penguin.

Pearson, Kit (1987) A Handful of Time. Toronto, Penguin.

Rees, Celia (2002) Sorceress. London, Bloomsbury.

Robertshaw, Andrew. (Accessed 03/06/2007). ‘“A dry shell of the past": Living history and the interpretation of historic houses’, Association for Heritage Interpretation: History Re-Enactment Workshop. http://www.heritage- interpretation.org.uk/journals/j2c-shell.html

Samuel, Raphael (1994) Theatres of Memory: Vol 1: Past and Present in Contemporary Culture. London and New York, Verso.

Wheatley, Nadia (2001) The House that was Eureka. Ringwood, Vic, Penguin.

Wilson, Kim (2001) ‘Abjection in Contemporary Australian Young Adult Fiction’, Papers: Explorations into Children’s Literature 11,3, 24-31.

Downloads

Published

2010-01-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

“Living History Fiction” (2010) Papers: Explorations into Children’s Literature, 20(1), pp. 77–86. doi:10.21153/pecl2010vol20no1art1151.

Similar Articles

1-10 of 185

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.