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"What if Napoleon hadn't lost Europe..." Topic


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Tango0130 Mar 2019 9:04 p.m. PST

"Across pop culture, history is being unraveled and remade. There's the post-World-War-II dystopia that emerges from a triumphant Nazi Germany in the TV show "The Man in the High Castle" (based on a Philip K. Dick book of the same name). There's the furor that erupted in 2017 over a proposed HBO series called "Confederate,"currently in limbo, which imagined an America in which the Confederacy successfully seceded from the Union, and the NBC show "Timeless" spends most episodes exploring "what if" scenarios in American history like "What if women never achieved the right to vote?".

Meanwhile, fiction writers have penned novels on variations of history stretching from a world in which the black plague killed 99 percent of Europe's population, making way for a Muslim empire (The Years of Rice and Salt, by Kim Stanley Robinson) to what would've happened if Franklin Delano Roosevelt hadn't been elected to a third term at the dawn of World War II (Philip Roth's The Plot Against America).

"Prior to 1960, we can identify perhaps 20 [alternate history novels] through the extent of Western literature," writes Catherine Gallagher, a professor of English literature at Berkeley. "Since 1960, almost 300 have been published in English alone, more than half of those appearing since 1990."…"
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robert piepenbrink Supporting Member of TMP31 Mar 2019 4:21 a.m. PST

A pity the author couldn't bring herself to talk to those nasty, low-class people who read science fiction. A reasonably well-read SF reader could have been a big help to her writing this.

Tango0131 Mar 2019 3:19 p.m. PST

(smile)

Amicalement
Armand

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