Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2024
Modern historical fiction and fantasy authors, like myself, who work with the Arthurian legend in the twenty-first century have a different perspective on ethics and the Arthurian tradition than many of the other scholars in this book who approach it from an academic position. While we read and interact with the medieval, romantic, and Victorian works, most of us are not academically trained. Therefore, we come to the Arthurian canon from an outside perspective, relying heavily on the research and interpretation of others who have studied the texts over the centuries to form and frame our fiction. Because of this, we often understand the medieval period and its influences on Arthurian characters very differently and have different goals from historical scholars. While we try to be as true to the time period as possible, our goal is to produce fiction that adds to the tradition for a modern audience as opposed to seeking to understand what has already been written or what really happened in history.
For example, in my Guinevere's Tale Trilogy, I chose to tell the traditional story of King Arthur and Camelot from Guinevere's perspective, giving her a fictional life as a priestess before her marriage to King Arthur and as a warrior defending her ancestral lands after Arthur's death, neither of which are part of the core legend. I also chose to make her a physically, intellectually, and emotionally strong woman unlike many of the stereotypically submissive incarnations of the past. This focus on Guinevere – a character who wasn't as fully explored as King Arthur until around 1980, the beginning of modern Arthurian fiction – and other twists on the key elements of the traditional story are my contributions to the ongoing evolution of the legend. As this article will show, the aim of most modern Arthurian historical fiction and fantasy authors is to contribute to the legend in ways that speak to readers and issues of our own time, while remaining true to the original legend within the confines of the subgenre in which we write. At the same time, other authors, in creating modern “sequels” to the original legend, employ creative license that takes them farther from the historical path to allow for parody, supernatural, or other re-interpretations of the existing story in order to make specific points about modern life.
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