Abstract

The most obvious formal feature of the historical novel as the genre founded by Walter Scott is the duplicity of a fictional foreground story and a historically approved background. Many television series have a historical past setting, and many of them can be seen as similar to historical novels. The 2005–07 series Rome kept something of the Scottian structure of fictional foreground story. The Pullo and Vorenus story line is fictional, and it stages the life of ordinary people, while historical characters like Julius Caesar and Pompey or Antony and Augustus do not merely form a factual background. The fictional and non-fictional stories are in balance, and they together offer a vivid and convincing representation of the past. Many historical television shows use the past only as decorative setting for a story full of intrigue, violence and sex (The Tudors, The Borgias). These may be described as historical (anti)romances, which tend to focus exclusively on the elite. Another kind of historical novel has been developed by some shows that (as if at the other extreme) eliminate the historical facts even from the background and represent everyday life of ordinary people in its (semi-)historical otherness. In shows like Mad Men or The Knick, no event of political history is mentioned, no historical person appears in the background. However, these shows successfully represent the otherness of the past from the viewpoint of public discourse on issues of race, gender, or even morality, phenomena which can be regarded as the development of a new kind of historical novel encouraged by the twentieth-century ideals of historiography.

Highlights

  • It is hardly a surprise that in the context of postmodernism’s sensitivity to historical knowledge, and the rise of quality television, several TV series have approached historical material

  • PKn, letnik 43, št 1, Ljubljana, maj 2020 draw a reliable picture of political history in the background; others experiment with new kinds of historical narrative, either through retelling stories of the political elite attested by historiography, or eliminating political history to focus on everyday life in the past

  • According to György Lukács’s definition, not every novel with past setting is a historical novel, only those that belong to the realist tradition initiated by Walter Scott, who is generally regarded as the founder of the genre, and have “the historical, that is, derivation of the individuality of characters from the historical peculiarity of their age” (Lukács 19), novels that represent the past in connection to the present and by doing so discuss crucial problems in the lives of the people

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Summary

Péter Hajdu

The most obvious formal feature of the historical novel as the genre founded by Walter Scott is the duplicity of a fictional foreground story and a historically approved background. With all its popular features, with all its concentration on the personal, Rome explains a major historical change in Roman society, and the Scottian duplicity of average fictional personnel and well documented characters of the elite helps to represent the crucial problems of the society This statement might be strong; the critical response to the balance of what historians call history and the focus on private as the carrier of novelistic narrative is polarized. In shows like Mad Men (Lionsgate 2007–15) or The Knick (Cinemax 2014–16) no event of political history is mentioned, no historical person appears in the background These shows successfully represent the crucial problems of the life of the people in their everyday reality, and the otherness of the past from the viewpoint of public discourse on issues of race, gender, or even morality. 18 Matt Zoller Seitz finds this episode quite unfocused “revisiting ides the series has spotlighted before,” which results in “the first installment of Mad Men that feels largely superfluous” (Zoller Seitz 111). 110

WORKS CITED
Fikcijskost v zgodovinskih televizijskih nadaljevankah
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