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There have been serious debates between historians, novelists
and filmmakers as to how best present historical narratives. When
writers and filmmakers talk of using historical research with
integrity, what exactly do they mean? Integrity and Historical
Research examines this question in detail. The first chapter
discusses the concept of integrity. The chapters that follow
reflect on this philosophical treatment in the light of fiction and
film that deals with history in a number of ways. How should
writers and filmmakers use lives? Can, and may, people who are now
dead and who may have lived long ago, be defamed?
The authors include academics, historians, social historians,
medievalists, oral historians, literary theorists, historical
novelists and script writers. They examine the theoretical
influences and practical choices that involve and concern writers
and filmmakers who rely on historical research. The desire to be
accurate may often conflict with the need to produce a work that
goes beyond the mere depiction of events in order to excite the
interest of readers and to hold that interest. At the same time
there is a developing emphasis on historians, to write well in
clear, accessible prose, which may involve using the novelists
techniques. How much license may be given to writers of fiction and
filmmakers in their depiction of historical characters and events?
This book begins to answer this question, while inviting further
discussion.
Great legends, like great men, are defined by their ability to
endure. One of the greatest stories of triumph over adversity in
railroading history is that of the Cumbres and Toltec Scenic
Railroad. For hers is not a story of wealth and power, carried on
the coat tails of society's upper class, but of sweat and blood, of
tears in the eyes of the men who saw the west for what it really
was: a place to dream. What began as the vision of General William
J. Palmer to give life to the narrow gauge rails of the Denver and
Rio Grande Railroad in Colorado, would become an ideal that spanned
100 years of history, culminating in the birth of the Cumbres and
Toltec Scenic Railroad and the return of the little narrow gauge
engine numbered 463. It is a story packed with action, adventure
and passion that interweaves with the lives of men like Gene Autry,
Bat Masterson and Lucien B. Maxwell. But most of all it is an
honest tale of the lives of men who dared to dream big and found
success even when the deck was stacked against them. They were
train buffs, steam fans, senators and family men. They were men who
saw a piece of Americana slipping away and were damned if they were
going to let it disappear. Like my dad said, "They were the most
over enthusiastic, unbusiness-like fools that ever set foot in shoe
leather," but they got the job done and 40 years later, the Cumbres
and Toltec Scenic Railroad is their living monument of hope to
future generations.
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