A False Start for the Classical-Historical Novel: Lockhart's Valerius and the Limits of Scott's Historicism

2002 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-209 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanwood S. Walker

This essay examines the relationship between a popular but neglected subgenre of nineteenth-century historical fiction, the classical-historical novel, and the Waverley novels of Walter Scott. Using John Gibson Lockhart's Valerius; a Roman Story (1821), the first of the classical-historical novels to appear in the wake of the Waverley novels, as a test-case, the essay demonstrates how this subgenre highlights the limits of Scott's model for historical fiction. The essay first outlines the nature of Scott's favored brand of historicism, which it argues was a genealogical one centered on the oral testimony of witnesses to the past events in question (or their near-descendants). It then assesses Lockhart's attempt to adapt Scott's historicist model to his novel's second-century setting, and argues that for reasons having to do both with the temporal and cultural remoteness of that setting, and with the special status of late antiquity in the nineteenth century, Scott'smodel was not available to Lockhart and subsequent classical-historical novelists. Lockhart's novel thus stands as an instructive "false start" for the nineteenth-century classical-historical novel.

Author(s):  
Nele Bemong

Between 1830 and 1850, practically out of nowhere there came into beinga truly 'Belgian' literature, written boch in Flemish and in French, but aimedat a single goal: the creation of a Belgian past and the conscruction of aBelgian national identity. The historical novel played a crucial role in thisconscruction and representation of a collective memory for the Belgian statejust out of the cradle. The prefaces to these historical novels are characterizedboth by the central role granted to the representacion of Flanders as the cradleof nineteenth-century Belgium, and by the organically and religiously inspiredimagery. Attempts were made to create an intimate genealogical relationshipwith the forefathers, in order to make the Belgian citizens feel closer to theirrich heritage. Through the activation of specific recollections from theimmense archive of the collective cultural memory, Belgian independencefound its legitimization both towards the international community andtowards the Belgian people.


2009 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-100
Author(s):  
SARAH MARTIN

The article considers the political impact of the historical novel by examining an example of the genre by Native American novelist James Welch. It discusses how the novel Fools Crow represents nineteenth-century Blackfeet experience, emphasizing how (retelling) the past can act in the present. To do this it engages with psychoanalytic readings of historical novels and the work of Foucault and Benjamin on memory and history. The article concludes by using Bhabha's notion of the “projective past” to understand the political strength of the novel's retelling of the story of a massacre of Native Americans.


Author(s):  
Fiona Price

The historical novel has often been defined in the terms set by Walter Scott’s fiction, as a reflection on a clear break or change between past and present. Returning to the range of historical fiction written before Scott, Reinventing Liberty explores this often neglected and misunderstood genre by reconstructing how conservatives and radicals fought through the medium of the historical past over the future of Britain. Aware of the events of the Civil War and 1688, witness to the American and French Revolutions, Scott’s precursors realized the dangers of absolutism, on the one hand, and political breakage, on the other. Interrogating the impact of commercial modernity, the works considered here do not adopt the familiar nineteenth-century Whig narrative of history as progress but instead imagine and reimagine the possibilities of transition. As such, they lay the groundwork for the British myth of political gradualism, while problematizing the rise of capital.


Author(s):  
Greg Forter

The Introduction lays the theoretical groundwork and historical frame for the main chapters. It engages debates on materialist vs. poststructuralist approaches to postcolonial studies; on the utopian imagination; on expanding the black Atlantic frame of reference to include the Indian Ocean; on the Anglophone biases of postcolonial studies and how these implicate the discipline in contemporary capitalism; on the genesis of the historical novel in the nineteenth century; and on the cycles of finance capital to which the postcolonial inflection of historical fiction is a response. Theorists discussed include Giovanni Arrighi, Ian Baucom, Walter Benjamin, Dipesh Chakrabarty, Frederic Jameson, and Georg Lukács.


2013 ◽  
Vol 121 (1) ◽  
pp. 60-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ina Ferris

This essay reads the seminal historical fiction of Walter Scott in conjunction with the medical apparition discourse that flourished in the early nineteenth century. It argues that the tactics of the historical novel in this period are best understood through an “apparitional poetics” that attempts to solve the problem of the historical image.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (15) ◽  
pp. 62-91
Author(s):  
Jorge Enrique Blanco García

This paper addresses the contemporary historical novel as a practice of critical ontology of the present. That is to say, a field of reflection that investigates the current ontological status. In the Colombian case, historical fiction has been attentive to interpret the past of violence and armed conflict in an aesthetic way as a mechanism to understand the future of the present. This essay proposes that historical novels, despite being located in a space-time already travelled, maintain a matrix of meaning anchored in the present reality's interpellation. To this end, this paper analyzes the novels The Crime of the Century (2006) by Miguel Torres and So much blood seen (2007) by Rafael Baena.


2013 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 53-67
Author(s):  
Jacek Hajduk

Summary This is a comparative study of two 20th-century historical novels set in the late antiquity, Teodor Parnicki’s Ætius, the Last of the Romans and Hanna Malewska’s The Fashion of This World Passeth Away. Drawing their inspiration from St Augustine’s De civitate dei, their authors found their fictions on a clear and coherent historiosophicsystem. Such an approach to the past seems to be characteristic feature of the modernist historical novel.


2014 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 217
Author(s):  
MICHELLE FERNANDA TASCA

<p><strong>Resumo: </strong>As fronteiras entre a História e a ficção possibilitaram a escrita de diversos textos oitocentistas que jogavam com essa dualidade conceitual. Alexandre Herculano (1810-1877) atuou intensamente nesse sentido, criando uma ficção histórica, característica do Romantismo português, ao trabalhar simultaneamente com objetos históricos e a imaginação. Ao mesmo tempo, percebemos na “Crônica do Descobrimento do Brasil” (1840) de Francisco Adolfo de Varnhagen (1816-1878) a presença de vários elementos característicos dessa Literatura desenvolvida por Herculano. A partir de uma leitura paralela dos textos de ambos os autores, procura-se perceber os caminhos tomados para a elaboração desse projeto literário oitocentista, que lançava as bases para um romance histórico lusitano, e a forma como tais elementos se desenvolveram nas obras em questão.</p><p><strong>Palavras-chave:</strong> Imaginação Histórica – Francisco Adolfo de Varnhagen – Alexandre Herculano.</p><p> </p><p><strong>Abstract: </strong>The boundaries between history and fiction enabled the writing of many nineteenth-century texts that played with this conceptual dualism. Alexandre Herculano (1810-1877) worked intensively towards this direction, creating a historical fiction characteristic of Portuguese romanticism while working with historical objects and imagination. In the Francisco Adolfo de Varnhagen’s (1816-1878) “Crônica do Descobrimento do Brasil” (1840) we also noticed the presence of several characteristic features of this literature developed by Herculano. By a parallel reading of the texts of both authors, we seek to understand the paths taken to the construction of the nineteenth-century literary project, which laid the foundation for a Lusitanian historical novel, and how these elements are developed in such works.</p><p><strong>Keywords:</strong> Historical Imagination – Francisco Adolfo de Varnhagen – Alexandre Herculano.</p>


2007 ◽  
Vol 36 ◽  
pp. 71-95
Author(s):  
Halim Kara

AbstractThis article examines the portrayal of Mehmed II, the conqueror of Istanbul, in Turkish historical fiction, as well as the literary and ideological implications of his portrayal with regard to Turkish national identity. Since the early Turkish Republic, Mehmed II has been described as a major character in over thirty historical novels. The article argues that over time the literary characterization of Mehmed II in Turkish fiction has undergone substantial change. During the early republican period, historical fiction adopted an ambivalent attitude toward Mehmed II. While one historical novel under discussion focuses mostly on Mehmed II's despotism and aggressive tendencies, another novel contemplates his military bravery and his ability to govern. However, with the arrival of the multi-party system in 1950, these ambivalent approaches toward Mehmed II changed, and he began to be portrayed as the ideal Turkish statesman, gaining the status of a national hero. The latter attitude toward him dominated historical fiction writing as late as in the early 1990s. At that time, Turkish historical meta-fiction began to portray a more complex and ambiguous Mehmed II, thus both challenging as well as re-producing his previous representations.


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (2018) (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Šela ◽  
Silvija Borovnik

Category: 1.02 Review Language: Original in Slovenian (Abstract in Slovenian and English, Summary in English) Key words: historical novels, female figures, reformation, Counter-Reformation, slovenian female authors, Mojca Kumerdej, Zlatka Rakovec-Felser, Zlata Vokač Abstract: This article deals with contemporary Slovenian female writers of historical fiction. In the main part is presented the analysis of selected contemporary historical novels by Mojca Kumerdej (Kronosova žetev, 2016), Zlatka Rakovec-Felser (Vražja Liza, 2017), and Zlata Vokač (Knjiga senc, 1993), published after the year 1991 and set in the literary periods of the 15th, 16th and early 17th century. During said periods, the Slovenian ethnic territory was marked primarily with the collapse of the Counts of Celje, Turkish invasions, reformation and counter-reformation. The women who sought a life in business or otherwise wanted to become successful in their careers were quickly silenced. Also briefly presented in the article are the development of the Slovenian historical novel and the role of Slovenian female authors in the development of said novels.


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