Tuesday, May 21, 2024

WHO TELLS THE STORY

 

History is written by the victors. So said Winston Churchill. Napoleon called it a fable agreed upon.

 

In my current WIP, a pre-teen learns that what she knows of history, even recent history, is but a version of it and not the most interesting version.

 

Young people learn from books and increasingly from games and other visual media, (such as movies) what passes for the “true” story of humanity’s past.

 

Even scientific truths are augmented by storytelling. Think of the visualization in school textbooks of what the dinosaurs looked like. These are hypothetical guesses, periodically revised. Yet these images are taken as true depictions of a world now gone.

 

The greatest achievement of winning in battle may not be the spoils of war or avoiding the pain of being ravaged. It may be that you and yours get to be the ones telling the story of who did what to whom.

 

Somehow, perhaps because I began my life in an embattled region, I felt the need to tackle this thorny matter.  Even more, it seems all the more important to make younger readers consider it.

 

Storytellers have an outsized responsibility, one few can begin to achieve, to have their audience made aware of what a vantage point does to perception.

 

Because perception is reality is more than a cliché. It is what we carry forward and use to make decisions. “Knowing history as to not repeat it” misses the point. Whose history do we know? Because, Virginia, it seems to me we are repetitiously repeating the repeats.  


5 comments:

janlcoates said...

I have a non-fiction illustrated book coming out next year about a fascinating Canadian artist who lived from 1910 to 2010, Doris McCarthy. She kept a diary from age 12 to about 90, and she also wrote 4 autobiographies - interesting to read the sections from her diaries that she chose to include. It must've been interesting for her to write her memories using her diaries from her earlier life since her 80 year-old eyes would have seen the world in a very different light.

Evelyn said...

Yes, Mirka, one of the reasons I like your current WIP is because it does help the reader understand that history, as we know it, is not the full picture.

And, of course, it seems to me that all the fake news that's currently being circulated in society makes it harder and harder to know what's really the truth.

Mirka Breen said...

Evelyn, as one of the few who read my WIP, I appreciate your input as well as the feedback help you gave me on the third draft.

Vijaya said...

Sifting through the noise to get to the truth is becoming harder and harder. All we can do is to pray for the Holy Spirit to consecrate us in truth, try to tell the stories that have placed upon our hearts, the truth that good always wins eventually.

MirkaK said...

When I recall what I learned about American history makes me want to rewrite the textbooks. Fortunately, others are correcting the incomplete, untrue “facts” we were fed. Yes, the victors told the story as they wanted to, not from the perspective of those who were conquered and enslaved. Also, history has generally been about the so-called accomplishments of men (who killed and
pillaged!) and little to nothing about women’s roles except as queens, mothers, misteesses.