Margaret L Carter's blog got me thinking...
How different would history be --or would it?-- if kudos for some discovery or victory went to someone else?
It wasn't Gallileo but an Englishman, Herriott who first mapped the moon with the help of a telescope.
http://news.aol.com/article/old-moon-map-corrects-history/307394
Suppose it was Admiral Lord De Saumarez who was responsible for the English fleet's great naval victories at Cadiz and on the Nile, rather than the high-profile maverick, Horatio Nelson?
What if the foresight and preparedness of Admiral Themistocles was more decisive in repelling Xerxes' invasion of Greece that were the delays and losses sustained at Thermopylae thanks to King Leonidas and his Spartans?
To pick up from Margaret's point, does it matter who built the railroad?
I suppose we've all been in situations where an upstart repeated someone else's idea but spoke more loudly, and got the credit for it. There was even a Fed-Ex advertisement on that theme!
Then, there's the tradition that it is usually the victor of any war who writes the history, prosecutes the perpetrators of war crimes, and makes the movies.
Does it matter in the long term?
How about the difference between historical injustice, and fiction?
Should a made-up character give one of the most famous political speeches in a nation's history, for instance?
Would this be acceptable if the made-up character was portrayed as the real historical character's double, standing in? Or a time traveler? Or a shape-shifting alien?
Suppose the alternate history's speech-giver was another real historical figure? (But not the person that history tells us gave the speech.)
Where does playing with history become offensive and irresponsible?
When should the facts get in the way of a good story?
Is it acceptable to "rip" alternative history from the headlines of one of the more colorful supermarket tabloids? (I assume that some of their news is made up!)
So many questions with which to wrestle!
Rowena Cherry
By the way, Knight's Fork is a featured review at UpTheStairCase.org
http://www.upthestaircase.org/cherry.htm
Showing posts with label Upthestaircase. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Upthestaircase. Show all posts
Sunday, January 18, 2009
Kudos, history and ethics
Labels:
history,
Knight's Fork,
rowena cherry,
Upthestaircase
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