Showing posts with label 1984. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1984. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Why Do Alternate Historians Love 1984 So Much? (with Alex "SpanishSpy" Wallace)

I today's video, I am joined by a special guest, Alex "SpanishSpy" Wallace, to talk about why alternate historians love George Orwell's dystopia classic: 1984. Enjoy (and sorry ahead of time for the audio issues):

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a blogger for Amazing Stories, a volunteer interviewer for SFFWorld and a Sidewise Awards for Alternate History judge. When not exploring alternate timelines he enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the day when travel between parallel universes becomes a reality. You can follow him on FacebookTwitterTumblr and YouTube. Learn how you can support his alternate history projects on Patreon.

Friday, October 9, 2015

Three Terrifying Alternate History Scenarios

History can be terrifying, what with all the torture, genocide, slavery and Pauly Shore. Still there are some imaginative alternate historians out there who have managed to make history even worse. So since this is the month of Halloween, I decided why not share three alternate history scenarios that personally scare me. I tried to stick only with "plausible" scenarios and avoid outright alien space bats (vampires, zombies, Lovecraftian horrors, etc.). So with that said, here are three terrifying alternate history scenarios...

#1: Nazis Win

The reason I think we see a lot of Nazis or Axis Win timelines is that there is something uniquely frightening about Nazi Germany existing to the present day. They embodied the dark side of Western civilization and even their very aesthetic produces fear and disgust. Since most Anglo-Americans never experienced life under Nazi occupation, we are left only to our imaginations of what Nazi brutality would have been like in the past and present.

Now there are a lot of stories where Nazi Germany won World War II, but only a few in my opinion that really capture the true level of horror such a result could produce. First, there is The Children's War by JN Stroyar, which is chock full of descriptions of torture and the methodical destruction of entire cultures by the victorious Reich as the rest of the world turns a blind eye. Then you have Moon of Ice by Brad Linaweaver, which features a horrifying vision of a better world from the eyes of the SS. My last recommendation is The Sound of His Horn by Sarban, where humans are hunted for sport.

All three stories sum up the most terrifying aspect of any Nazi win scenario: that when people get to decide who is human and who is not human, everyone suffers.

#2: 1984 is Real

George Orwell's 1984 holds a special place in the hearts of alternate historians. In many ways its the perfect dystopia that features the power of the state to crush individualism. Since alternate historians commonly believe in the ability of the individual to change the course of history, seeing a society that does everything to prevent the individual from having any purpose is certainly a nightmare scenario for anyone who asks what if. While Orwellian concepts are everywhere in the dark, pessimistic timelines you can find online, its the ones that actually try to find a point of divergence to actually create the world of 1984 that are particularly grim.

I have two great examples for what I am talking about above. The first is Will Ritson's "Images of 1984 - Stories from Oceania" and its reboot "Let's all go down the Strand". Both adopt the theory that everything we hear from the State (including the history of the world given to Winston Smith) is a lie and that Oceania is contained only to Britain, while the rest of the world is fine (more or less). Thus Britain becomes in some ways even worse than North Korea, but what if there really were three mega-states locked in a constant struggle while at the same time crushing any dissent within their borders? That would give us "The Rise of the Tri-State World Order" by SpanishSpy, which shows step by step how a change in history in WWII leads to events of 1984 decades later.

Just remember, kids. 1984 is just a story. You can change history, you can change history, you can change history...

#3: Nuclear War

We have come a long way in our understanding of nuclear energy. We no longer assume radiation will grant superpowers or create giant monsters. Instead we know it will give you cancer and a slow, painful death. We no longer assume nuclear war will wipe out every living thing on the planet. Instead we know it will just kills billions and make things shitty for everyone else for generations to come. We no longer assume our leaders are willing to press the button at the slightest...actually, no, we do still assume that.

Nevertheless, even in our post-Cold War world, the threat of nuclear annihilation has never gone away and thus reading about what could happen if the bomb did drop still sends a chill down our spines. Some good stories in this setting include Resurrection Day by Brendan DuBois and, for web originals, you got "1983: Doomsday" and "Protect and Survive". None of these stories are particularly scary in the traditional sense, but its the stories they don't tell which are truly shocking.

The ones where someone watches their entire family die, while clean water and food disappear and people become more and more desperate to survive...or else just give up entirely.

Conclusion

Its true that history is full of horrors, so perhaps its pointless to create new ones. That being said, scenarios like the ones above remind us everyday that the history we know could have been a lot worse.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a blogger on Amazing Stories and a Sidewise Awards for Alternate History judgeWhen not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the day when travel between parallel universes becomes a reality. You can follow him on FacebookTwitter and YouTube. Learn how you can support his alternate history projects on Patreon.

Monday, June 29, 2015

Map Monday: A Very British Civil War by Rvbomally

Rvbomally returns to Map Monday with his map and scenario based on 1938: A Very British Civil War. He calls it...well, he calls it "A Very British Civil War":
The scenario follows the point of divergence of the wargame. King Edward VIII refuses the abdicate, touching off a civil war. Hitler becomes over confident, thinking things will be easier without the British Empire to worry about and starts World War II a tad earlier by invading Czechoslovakia. As you can guess things don't go as planned for our least favorite German Chancellor and most of Europe comes under Soviet domination. The free world is still led by the United States, buts its main allies appear to be India and China in this timeline. Meanwhile, the Soviet Union traded their short lived alliance with the Chinese Communists in OTL to make greater inroads in Europe and Africa.

I like to point out that this map is set in 1984 and considering that rump England is a fascist state simply called the "English State" you can probably guess which classic work of dystopic fiction Rvbomally is referencing. In fact that Orwellian nightmare future has been a big inspiration for a lot of Rvbomally works, but for this one he is using the popular fan theory that Britain is a North Korea-esque state, while the rest of the world is fine. Of course, we have seen that before, but I still enjoyed this take on it.

Honorable mentions this week go out to Cody Franklin of Alternate History Hub's Alternate Countries Week 1 and Mark Ball of Sci Fi Ideas' AltMap: Holy Romans Batman! If you want to submit a map for the next Map Monday, email me at ahwupdate at gmail dot com with your map attached and a brief description in the body of the email.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Thursday, June 5, 2014

Timeline Thursday: Let's all go down the Strand - Images of 1984 reboot by Will Ritson

A really quick Timeline Thursday because I have been slacking on posting. A while back Sean Korsgaard reviewed "Images of 1984 - Stories from Oceania" by Will Ritson. It is an AlternateHistory.com timeline centered around a world where the events of Orwell's 1984 actually happened, but it uses the fan theory that states Oceania is only confined to Britain and the rest of the world is fine.

It was a great dystopia that turned Britain into North Korea. Characters from the novel interacted with famous historical people of the time including Oswald Mosley, Eric Blair and billionaire tyrant Rupert Murdoch as Britain evolves into Oceania and eventually is liberated in the 21st century by a coalition of foreign powers.

Well the doubleplusgood news is that Ritson has begun work on reboot to "Images of 1984" which he is calling this time: "Let's all go down the Strand - Images of 1984 reboot". Much like the original, this timeline hinges on Mosley reuniting with the Labour party in 1931, thus avoiding tainting himself with fascism. The timeline was only rebooted a few weeks ago, but already it has wet my appetite for more "Images of 1984" updates.

The story is not told in a straight narrative. Through brief snippets that jump around three centuries, Ritson drops hints about how Oceania came to be, what was happening in the background during 1984 and what post-Oceania Britain is like. Not all of them seem to make sense at first read, but they give glimpses about what future plot lines that may emerge in later updates.

That is where the bad news comes in. Ritson so far has only posted sporadically with several days between each one. The current break is about a week old as I write this and there is no guarantee when the next one will come out. Still the reboot is a quick read that I think will get you excited for me. You can always read the original to satisfy your craving.

Long live Big Brother!

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Upcoming Retro-SF That Will Be Confused as AH

Alternate history is a lot of things, but it is not a dumping ground for out-of-date science fiction.

Let me explain: science fiction authors like to write about the future. Stories can be set in the  near future or thousands to millions of years from the date of publication. The problem is that through the natural progression of time, the present day catches up with these stories and leaves behind covered in dust. Suddenly this "retro-SF" is a lot less prophetic. Best examples of this phenomenon are 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) and Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949). Good books, bad predictions.

The problem is people have the tendency to lump retro-SF into alternate history. On its face its seems logical. These universes have an "alternate" history to OTL, but that does not place them in the category of alternate history. General rule of thumb: it is the author's intent that determines if the work is an alternate history. If the author intended to change the past, it is an alternate history. With alternate history the date of publication is important when determining if the story belongs in the genre.

More importantly, science fiction does not need a catch-all genre for obsolete futures. Science fiction already has a genre for retro-SF. Its called science fiction.

With that being said, here are a selection of short stories, novelstelevision and films soon to be called alternate history (for sake of length I only went up to 2099):

2013
Escape From LA

2015
Back To The Future Part II (This just applies to the scenes in the future. The alternate 1985 old Biff creates still counts as alternate history).

2017
"Trinity"

2019
The Running Man
The Seeds of Time
The Sparrow

2020
Air
Red Mars

2021
The Children of Men (novel)
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?

2022
Seaquest DSV
Soylent Green

2023
Sewer, Gas and Electric: The Public Works Trilogy

2024
"A Boy and His Dog"

2025
334
Rainbows End
Star Trek
Titan

2026
Metropolis
"There Will Come Soft Rain"

2027
Blade Runner
Children Of Men (film)
"Six Months, Three Days"

2029
Terminator

2030
Neuromancer

2031
Frankenstein Unbound

2035
Doomsday
I Robot
The Speed of Dark

2037
"Trojan Horse"

2038
"Epoch"
"Restoration"
White Queen

2047
On Wings of Song
River of Gods

2050
Childhood's End
Eight Worlds series

2054
Doomsday Book

2057
To Say Nothing of the Dog

2059
He, She and It

2063
Star Trek: First Contact

2070
Doctor Who, "The Moonbase"

2075
The Moon is a Harsh Mistress

2077
Rendezvous with Rama

2082
Otherland tetralogy

2086
Blindsight

2087
Cyborg 2087

2092
The Last Man

2094
The Outward Urge

This is not a complete list, so feel free to share examples in the comment section.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a volunteer editor for Alt Hist and a contributor to Just Below the Law. His fiction can be found at Echelon PressJake's Monthly and his own writing blog. When not writing he works as an attorney and enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Civilization II: Eternal War

The year is 3991 AD.

The polar ice caps have melted.  Nuclear war has rendered most of the Earth uninhabitable. Only 15 million people still call the planet home, most of humanity having died off from radiation, flooding and famine.  Almost all of them are part of the last three nations on Earth (the theocratic Americans, the communist Neo-Celts and the theocratic Neo-Vikings) who have been locked in a two thousand year war for the last remaining resources on the wounded planet.

Modern technology has made ICBMs obsolete, but that has not stopped tactical and suitcase nuclear weapons from being used on the modern battlefield.  Democracy and individual liberty are a thing of the past, but almost every generation a doomed rebellion is launched that accomplishes nothing but insure that some soldiers die at home instead of on the stalled fronts that have become a hell on Earth.

In this bleak future there are a few reformers who want to use humanity's advanced technology to save the planet, but when the choice is either feed your people or total annihilation, there really is not much of choice. So the factories pump out their war machines with little hope of victory or salvation from a slow death as our world dies.

This grimdark future is brought to you by...Civilization II?!?!

That's right kids.  Around 10 years ago a Reddit user by the name of "Lycerius" started a game of Civilization II that he has been playing on-and-off ever since.  Somehow, completely unintentionally, the world came to closely resemble Orwell's 1984.  After sharing his nightmare with Reddit, news of his marathon gaming exploded across the Internet and was covered by such publication as The Huffington Post and PC Gamer.

The game has inspired its own subreddit where people discuss the implications of the game and share their own fan fiction set in the universe.  Someone even recently created a Wiki, though there is not much content there...yet.

What I find most intriguing about this game is how eerily it resembles Orwell's future of eternal war and absolute state oppression.  Now I know some are thinking that this was a fluke and Civilization II is just a computer game.  Nevertheless in a world where World of Warcraft glitch can realistically portray a global epidemic, who is to say that we are not seeing the outcome of what happens when we compete with other nations for scare resources without any consideration of the good of mankind?

Either way I am going to go dig up my old Hearts of Iron game where I conquered the world as a fascist US and see what happens next!

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a volunteer editor for the Alt Hist magazine and a contributor to Just Below the Law. One of his short stories will be published in the upcoming Echelon Press anthology, Once Upon a Clockwork Tale (2013). When not writing he works as an attorney in the state of Illinois and enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Weekly Update #47.2

Editor's Note

Sorry about that links only post yesterday.  Real life can be pretty demanding, but I hope you all enjoyed Chris' Draka review.  I promise to have more content heavy posts coming up this week, including an Airship Update, some interviews and some advice on self-publishing.

Some good news, just beat our monthly page view record again.  That makes it six months in a row, but I want to break 6000 page views this month and if we continue at the pace we are going, it is extremely likely to happen.  By the way, please, please, please like us on Facebook.  We are just one fan away from 100!

Meanwhile, we got our first reader from Vietnam. Welcome!

And now the news...

The Company of the Dead Reviews

The Company of the Dead by David Kowalski has gotten some press lately since being released in the United States and it has been good.  Sally Hughes at We Love This Book said that the novel is "fast-paced and...delivers an exciting read which raises some fascinating philosophic question."  Meanwhile Marleen at More Than a Reading Journal praised the novel by saying "I have to conclude that this is an original, fascinating and almost impossible to put down book." Then there was the review at Falcata Times which said that the story "delivered everything I wanted, gave me pause for thought and wondered what else David will have in his imagination for future releases. A great debut all in and one that will make one hell of a film."

Those interested in learning more about The Company of the Dead can check out my review of the novel and stay tuned for my interview with David Kowalski, who has graciously consented to be interviewed.

Dissecting Worlds

Those needing a new podcast should check out the guys at Geek Syndicate who have a series called Dissecting Worlds.   The upcoming season of Dissecting Worlds will be alternate history themed. Here is a proposed list of episodes:

  • Plague!: The Years of Rice and Salt and The Grand Flow of History
  • Nazis!: The Age of World War (1914-1949)
  • Romans!: Ancient and Classical Alternates.
  • Americans!: War of Independence and American Civil War
  • Illuminati!: Secret Histories and the Conspiracy Novel
  • Victorians!: Steampunk and the Age of Imperialism
  • Conclusions.
I highly recommend that you subscribe because you will get the chance to hear me be a guest on the episode about Americans.  The episode should appear sometime in July or August.  In the meantime, go follow Dissecting Worlds on Twitter.

Upcoming Films

Last week was full of movie news for alternate historians.  Here are some highlights:


Links to the Multiverse

Online Alternate History

1636: The Kremlin Games – Snippet 15

Games

Unrelenting War in an Alternate History by Dust Warfare at Fantasy Flight Games.

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Mitro is founder, editor and contributor of Alternate History Weekly Update. When he is not busy writing about his passion for alternate history, he spends his time working as a licensed attorney in the state of Illinois and dreams of being a published author himself one day.

Saturday, January 21, 2012

DD Date 1984.01.21

January 21, 1984

Winter has been milder than scientists ever thought a "nuclear winter" would be. In fact, we are experiencing a rather warm and wet winter here in South Carolina. Or at least in our little corner of that fine state. From what has been gathered so far by authorized explorations - gasoline and diesel being scarce as it is with no new deliveries in over three months - the state south of Laurens county may have been largely destroyed. Nobody seems to be coming up the interstate since the first of December, so whoever is still living counties outside of the upstate are keeping to themselves nowadays.

Local politicians, not knowing what is happening nationally, nevertheless are busy gearing up for the presidential race in November. The Democratic party is all excited about the candidacy of local hometown candidate Jesse Jackson - presently living and working in Chicago. Of course, like all big cities in a nuclear war, Chicago may have suffered like Charlotte and Atlanta did. But anyhow, talk is all around town - especially among the black community - that Jackson has a chance against former vice president Mondale. The Iowa caucuses are a month away - and if anywhere survives today it would be Iowa! - and both Jackson and Senator Hollings are on the ticket then. Of course, if the world beyond our state is like what we have seen so far, there probably hasn't been any campaigning going on. But still, you never know.

If there is an election, though, I think President Reagan can beat anybody the Democrats end up with. I really wish we'd get at least some radio coverage from somewhere. I mean, we've got some electricity and there are at least some radios that didn't die from the electromagnetic pulses. The mayor's office and county counsel insist that everything is being done to restore communications with the rest of the world, but I'm not so sure anything can be done. Well, it's time for my ride to work to get here, so I'd better turn out this light and say good night to Debbie.

Previous Entry: DD Date 1984.01.11
Next Entry: DD Date 1984.01.25

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

DD Date 1984.01.11

January 11, 1984

Well, I survived another year. My birthday turned out rather nicely yesterday as Debbie and some friends put together a surprise party for me down at Freedom Baptist Church. Some BJ grads had worked with Debbie's brother Chuck to work things out. They called it a Bible Study and I couldn't resist checking it out since they had said there would be baby sitting for the kids.

There was even a cake -- 31 candles actually is quite a few to blow out at one time, but I did it! The ladies at the church had done their best to fix the dinner of green beans, pork chops and mashed potatoes using the facilities in the church kitchen. The families had called in some favors and collected some books and things from the campus bookstore at Bob Jones. They were cheering me on in my search for a church even though I'm a Presbyterian and they're all Baptist! But these last few months I've learned that the BJ community here in the Berea area is quite strong.

One of the men from the school works in the shop and he helped me set up the bicycle I got for Christmas to turn the car alternator and recharge the battery. It takes quite a bit of work, but it's like those exercise bikes -- peddling as fast as you can and getting nowhere! But I keep in shape while in the house while the kids are napping. Of course, I have work I could be doing, but I can do some of that at night to use up some of the battery!

Oh yeah, one of the birthday presents was a ream of notebook paper, a binder and a pack of pencils! I'm set to keep a record of this surreal adventure for months to come. Perhaps one day these pages will be read by civilized folk with electricity and automobiles of their own. I hope those people aren't Russians, though. That's the one thing that bothers me about this whole adventure -- the probability that the enemy is coming any day to clean up the mess they have made. The fact that we have not received any word from the federal OR state government is highly disturbing. Of course, we may have got them before they could completely destroy us - that "MAD" thing, "Mutually Assured Destruction!" I guess we'll know some day what really happened.

Previous entry: DD Date 1984.01.04
Next entry: DD Date 1984.01.21

Friday, January 6, 2012

DD Date 1984.01.04

January 4, 1984

It seems a little strange, it being the long "predicted" 1984. George Orwell's classic tale of a land ruled by a socialistic leader who took Machiavelli to the extreme has served as a warning to Western democracies of what the world would be like if the ways of the Soviet Union prevailed. Orwell was writing in post-war England in 1948 as London was rebuilding from German attacks not so many years earlier. He knew that Russia was an ally in that war, but he also realized the danger of the socialism that nation represented.

Well, I guess he was right, in a way, Russia seems to have been much more evil that even president Reagan imagined. For all of his talk, I shouldn't be surprised that Russia's leader Yuri Andropov attacked us. The man was KGB, and from what I have read those guys are not nice! Well, we survived his attacks, for now anyway. The winter is about to set in, though, and without electricity we'd better hope that the wood holds out.

As scheduled, I was working Sunday night when the year began. The silence was broken in the minutes before midnight by fireworks in the neighborhood. I don't know if the firecrackers were left over from the Fourth or whether people actually spent money on them instead of more important things. There's no explaining some folks. At least the patients I take care of didn't particularly care. Many of them only have days to live anyway, since we now are a kind of clearing house for the morgue. I think it's called 'hospice' and we are trying to keep the people comfortable without much more than out of date narcotics. I still visit some of the elderly folks that we sent home to live with family as part of my job, though. They at least have the comfort of knowing their family is near.

The good news is that we now have running water! Mayor Workman's office has worked with the utility companies to bypass electric pumps with a low pressure system bringing water downhill from the lakes and reservoirs. Flushing toilets is forbidden, though, since the sewage treatment system cannot handle the waste. Our outhouse is going to have to last a bit longer, I guess. As it is, runoff from the drainage systems is going directly to the rivers downstream. I suppose this is not good news for folks living downstream!

Well, Debbie will be home soon (it's been dark for some time and the kids are in bed). So I think I'm going to put down the pencil and paper and pick up a book to use up a little more of this light. I finally got plans on how to hook the car's old alternator up to a bicycle to charge the battery. Now if I can only get it working before the battery goes dead!

Previous entry: DD Date 1983.12.30
Next entry: DD Date 1984.01.11

Friday, December 30, 2011

DD Date 1983.12.30

December 30, 2011

Well, this ends three months of weekly diary entries to try to make some sense out of life after the "unthinkable" has happened. It is a wonder that civilization here in the USA has not collapsed. Of course, it may have outside of our immediate area. As far as I know there have been no expeditions beyond short ones across the state lines to Georgia and North Carolina, and no one has received any messages from further away.

So, while I still have some notebook paper, I guess I will write what I remember of the "last year of the United States of America." I don't follow world events too much, so this will be somewhat short.

Back in January, President Reagan surprised many when he nominated a woman from North Carolina, Elizabeth Dole, to oversee the Department of Transportation. She is the second wife of Senator Bob Dole of Kansas. We got a preview of "hard times" to come when the Independent Truckers Association went on strike in response to the federal tax on fuel going up. Some stuff got scarce for about two weeks. The trucks stopped running three months ago and we are learning that the shelves don't restock themselves!

February saw the first of a bunch of Democrats after Reagan's job in 1984. In all I think seven -- including Fritz Hollings! -- had declared their intent by the end of September. Personally, I think American hero, now Senator, John Glenn is the best among them all. We can assume president Reagan was waiting to announce his intentions sometime this winter. I don't think there is any question that he will be the candidate -- if there is an election next year and he is even alive. It's hard not knowing what's happening around the world! Bringing a 'light note' to a bad situation (the Korean War), the television show M*A*S*H ended a series that lasted three times as long as the war it portrayed. -- I missed that show but caught it on the summer reruns!

Spring time saw more conservatives in high places -- Germany elected Kohl and in England Margaret Thatcher got re-elected. It was looking good for us conservatives. Reagan has been talking tough against the remaining Communists out there and I think we may have been winning that ideological battle before what I guess is World War III -- still no draft or anything -- began. I think the "new enemy" we were facing was a religious one in Israel and surrounding countries. The Muslim fighters don't hesitate to kill others by killing themselves. They showed the world that the US was their enemy by blowing up the US Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon!

In America, though, the Supreme Court made what could be a "liberal" decision concerning what would seem to be a freedom of assembly issue -- against Bob Jones University! Back when I was there I let it be known that I thought some of their policies didn't go along with my interpretation of the Bible. One of the things I disagreed with was their stand on 'inter-racial' dating. Heck, I had a great 'preacher boy' in a group that I ministered with that was from the Caribbean that was of 'mixed race' heritage. Anyway, the school would not change this on threat of 'losing' its tax exempt status. Well, its seems that the IRS can trump the constitution! The school lost its exemption. From now on, any contributions to the school cannot be counted as deductions.

The Summer saw more terrorism - hijackings and bombings - around the world. From the Mideast, to South Africa, to the Pacific, things started going bad. I don't understand how people can be so deranged as to kill themselves to make a political point. Assassinations at least make sense - going back to ancient Rome and beyond - but suicide bombs are insane! There was a major assassination, in fact, in the Phillipines -- Aquino, I think, sometimes this past summer. Anyway, the summer ended with the mess between the US and Russia - first the downing of that Korean jet with Americans on it -- a congressman from Georgia being one of them -- on September first. I'm sure that probably had something to do with the beginning of the war that perhaps has destroyed this country. And then, three weeks later we get the world as we NOW know it!

The fall months were a time of getting used to the weirdness of life without the pleasantries of the twentieth century - at home anyway. I am sure that the emergency generators in use won't last much longer either. According to the authorities - as posted on bulletin boards and spoken in town meetings - the nuclear power plant is a long way from being fixed. Other power alternatives - such as the coal powered facility in Pelzer, are closer to being on line, but the EMPs that wiped out electronics all over the place mean that re-wiring and re-engineering will take quite some time.

And so, there it is, what I remember about this year. I'm sure it won't be part of any history archives anyway, but it helps me put things in perspective as I look forward to a new year coming up this weekend. I will be working, of course, and probably won't actually 'celebrate' 1984 -- the year of "Big Brother"! getting here. Ironically, I suppose, the computers that were predicted to usher in that socialist era have been largely silenced. Wow. I wonder if that means we win after all.

Previous entry: DD Date 1983.12.21
Next entry: DD Date 1984.01.04

Friday, October 14, 2011

Showcase: Images of 1984 - Stories from Oceania

Welcome, my dear readers, to the first of our latest showcasing of alternate history's more terrifying creations. To open this little segment of horrors, I figured we'd delve into a timeline that delves into one of fictions darker worlds itself.

In the world of fiction, you'd be hard pressed to find a world more bleak or dystopic than George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four. This timeless tale of a man trying to maintain his sanity in the face of an all-powerful totalitarian regime, one that is not only unbeatable and inescapable, but is in the midst of its final triumph over free will. From its first pages to its final four words, Nineteen Eighty-Four, Big Brother and Ingsoc have become the face and form of the very sort of inescapable ever-present dictatorship that haunts the nightmares of almost any person who values freedom. In the words of O'Brian, 'Imagine a boot stamping on a human face - forever', and you have a phrase that captures the very essence of Oceania.
Nineteen Eighty-Four has sparked debates ever since it's release, quite a few of them concerning the world it takes place in. How much of the world is a fabrication? Is Oceania really a pan-Continental superpower, or is that just a lie used to keep the populace of a far smaller nation in check? What happened to the Royal Family? Is Big Brother a real person, and if so, who is he? Will the regime ever fall? Perhaps most of all, what chain of events could have possibly have led to such a dark world? It is to answer many of these questions, Will Ritson created his masterful alternate history Images of 1984 - Stories from Oceania.
The slow, agonizing decent into dictatorship begins with two seemingly minor PODs. The first is that Oswald Mosley and his 'New Party' merge back into Labour in the early thirties, allowing for Mosley to become one of Labours more powerful members. The second is the early death of Sir Waldron Smithers, whom was responsible for a lot of anti-communist legislation of the era. From here, we see a far bloodier liberation of Europe that ends with a nuclear bomb getting dropped on Hamburg. Decolonization kicks off after the last Governor General of India, Sir Eric Blair, manages to convince Nehru and Jinnah to keep India united as a single nation, which becomes independent in 1947. Butterflies continue to effect the wider world, with some of including Joseph P. Kennedy being elected President in 1956 and Che Guevara abandoning the Castro brothers in Cuba in favor of supporting the Ingsoc revolution in Britain.

Of course the big change of the TL comes to Britain, which post war fails to see either a post-war economic recovery or strong political leadership. As a result the island sees large scale political upheaval, with the final elections for Parliament held in 1953, and various emergency governments rising and falling afterwards, without revealing too many spoilers, we get to see several factions headed by real and fictional figures before what will become the Oceanian government begins to consolidate it's power base in the late 1950s. At the TLs current point, the new government is moving the capital back to the twice-ruined London, and is discussing the construction of the buildings that will come to house the four infamous ministries. Against this, we get the common citizen's perspective of the fall of Britain and rise of Oceania through the eyes of the young Winston Smith. As a whole, it is a grim and chilling read, one made all the more frightening with little hints dropped here and there about the dark future we all know lays ahead.

There is one huge change here, in the form of a light at the end of the tunnel for this Oceania. Interspersed between some of the entries, are brief glimpses of the future, one where the Oceanian government has fallen to an Arab Spring style popular uprising. Just as it was the telescreens that formed the key to subjugating most of the populace, the Internet would prove the key to their liberty, with the story hinting at the revolt begins among students after the China-esque web filters fail, allowing them a glimpse of the real world. The post-Ingsoc Britain is portrayed much as how you might expect to see North Korea in the future -- impoverished, struggling to rebuild, dealing with demons from the past, occupied by American and Commonwealth troops, and an increasing number of Brits seeking a better life abroad. Though things are looking better for Britain than they have in half a century, even in this light, there is darkness.

The attention to detail is superb, with the author showing supreme knowledge of both post WWII Britain and Nineteen Eighty-Four. Two examples that I remember specifically are the stories behind the nuking of Colchester and the 'non-existent' photograph of Jones, Aaronson and Rutherford, both done well and believably, and in the case of the former, very chilling. Of course in addition to the novel's own cast, we see OTL figures from Oswald Mosley, Margaret Thatcher, and even Winston Churchill himself have a hand in leading Britain bit by bit down the path to tyranny, telescreens and Thought Police.

And that is the key to what makes Images of 1984 as haunting as it is. While it manages to capture much of what made the Orwellian novel chilling, it also manages to be terrifying in a different, and very important way. That being that the back story and cast - many of whom are familiar to anyone who knows their history - adds an all too human element to the story, one that reminds the reader just how painfully easy the descent into such tyranny is. Though 1984 certainly struck a chord, this TL manages to strike a very personal one as you watch post-WWII Britain transform itself into a dictatorship that makes North Korea look like Candyland.
Tragically, Images of 1984 is one of all too many superb alternate histories around the web that lie half-finished and for the most part abandoned. The writer, Will Ritson, has a habit of updating when there is enough demand on the thread, so with any luck, my dear readers, this thread can get enough attention to have him finish this superb and all too real tale of the rise, rule, and fall of Oceania.

Soldier, scholar, writer and web-voyeur, Sean CW Korsgaard has been active in the alternate history community since 2006, and was recently elected to succeed Mitro as President of the Alternate History Online facebook group. In addition to his contributions at the Alternate History Weekly Update, he writes for several websites, including his own, which can be found here.