Popular Imagination Versus Historical Reality

Historical films have been subject to controversy and criticism within the discipline of history upon the rise of popular interest in new and innovative forms of historical representation. The five to seven years between the release of Gladiator (2000) and Rome (2005-2007) saw an upsurge of historic...

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Main Author: Mirela Cufurovic
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UTS ePRESS 2018-12-01
Series:Public History Review
Subjects:
HBO
Online Access:https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/phrj/article/view/6157
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spelling doaj-f51d4dbc829d49c5ac11eca4f8fda8352020-11-25T02:44:47ZengUTS ePRESSPublic History Review1833-49892018-12-012511610.5130/phrj.v25i0.61576157Popular Imagination Versus Historical RealityMirela Cufurovic0Charles Sturt University University of SydneyHistorical films have been subject to controversy and criticism within the discipline of history upon the rise of popular interest in new and innovative forms of historical representation. The five to seven years between the release of Gladiator (2000) and Rome (2005-2007) saw an upsurge of historical films focusing on the ‘epic’: the spectacular, monumental and immersive periods of history that exude a mix of historical reality and speculative fiction. This paper argues that it is not historical accuracy or film as historical evidence that matters, but the historical questions and debates that film raises for its audience and the historical profession regarding the past it presents and its implication on history. Such questions and debates base themselves around the extent to which filmmakers are able to interpret history through images and what kind of historical understandings it hopes to achieve. This paper analyses the complexity of public history through a comparative study of reviews on five online message boards, such as IMBD, Amazon, TV.com and Metacritic, relating to HBO’s Rome – chosen due to its unique ability of igniting historiographical debate by presenting history as an accident, thus allowing audiences to question and reinterpret the outcome of historical events. KEYWORDS HBO; Rome; Film; Historiography; Public History; Popular Imaginationhttps://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/phrj/article/view/6157HBORomeFilmHistoriographyPublic HistoryPopular Imagination
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mirela Cufurovic
spellingShingle Mirela Cufurovic
Popular Imagination Versus Historical Reality
Public History Review
HBO
Rome
Film
Historiography
Public History
Popular Imagination
author_facet Mirela Cufurovic
author_sort Mirela Cufurovic
title Popular Imagination Versus Historical Reality
title_short Popular Imagination Versus Historical Reality
title_full Popular Imagination Versus Historical Reality
title_fullStr Popular Imagination Versus Historical Reality
title_full_unstemmed Popular Imagination Versus Historical Reality
title_sort popular imagination versus historical reality
publisher UTS ePRESS
series Public History Review
issn 1833-4989
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Historical films have been subject to controversy and criticism within the discipline of history upon the rise of popular interest in new and innovative forms of historical representation. The five to seven years between the release of Gladiator (2000) and Rome (2005-2007) saw an upsurge of historical films focusing on the ‘epic’: the spectacular, monumental and immersive periods of history that exude a mix of historical reality and speculative fiction. This paper argues that it is not historical accuracy or film as historical evidence that matters, but the historical questions and debates that film raises for its audience and the historical profession regarding the past it presents and its implication on history. Such questions and debates base themselves around the extent to which filmmakers are able to interpret history through images and what kind of historical understandings it hopes to achieve. This paper analyses the complexity of public history through a comparative study of reviews on five online message boards, such as IMBD, Amazon, TV.com and Metacritic, relating to HBO’s Rome – chosen due to its unique ability of igniting historiographical debate by presenting history as an accident, thus allowing audiences to question and reinterpret the outcome of historical events. KEYWORDS HBO; Rome; Film; Historiography; Public History; Popular Imagination
topic HBO
Rome
Film
Historiography
Public History
Popular Imagination
url https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/phrj/article/view/6157
work_keys_str_mv AT mirelacufurovic popularimaginationversushistoricalreality
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