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Historically accurate Aristotle? |
A social media thread about bad history in historical costume drama caused me to recall an idea I had years ago upon a re-read of Aaron Allston's wonderful
Mythic Greece: Age of Heroes. At the time,
Hercules: The Legendary Journeys was still in syndication, and while not particularly good, it did suggest the using of Greek Myth and geographic as a backdrop for a fantasy setting that might not otherwise have a lot of the trappings of Greek myth. For the most part,
Hercules stuck to the big names, but there's no reason you couldn't get as detailed as Allston's book, but give it a wholly un-Mythic Greece feel.
The changes can be big.
Reign: The Conqueror (based on the novel
Arekusandā Senki by Hiroshi Aramata) re-imagines the life of Alexander the Great as a sort of science fantasy thing with giant Persian war machines and Pythagorean ninjas. Or, they can be subtle, like
Black Sails weaving historical pirates with a sort of prequel to
Treasure Island. (The difference I see between this last one and a standard historical setting which would generally tend to insert fictional characters, i.e. the PCs, into history, is the "high concept" of the literary/historical mashup.)
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A lesson on Greek myth every week? |
So I say go ahead and run a Kirby-esque space opera based on the book of Exodus. Recontextualize the War of Roses to have it take place in something like Warring States Japan. Or take the history presented in the
Book of Mormon and turn it into a hexcrawl as
Jeff Reints did.
Let history be your guide, not your boss.
Ah yes, Ares and Hercules duking it out in the lush New Zealand country-side. I loved that show.
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