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Is there a difference between historical fiction and creative non-fiction?


To what extent 'Reality' be included while writing 'Realistic' Fiction literature?How acceptable is “alternate history” in writing (nowadays)?Breaking the Fourth Wall in Creative Non-FictionWriting a coherent alt-history universeHow do you make characters relatable if they exist in a completely different moral context?Fictionalizing firsthand accounts from history?Is my work fiction or non-fiction?Is it okay to majorly distort historical facts while writing a fiction story?How to help the reader wrestle through historical atrocities which would be considered normal to the POV character






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11


















I have seen two similar terms, historical fiction and creative non-fiction. I'm writing some stories that are set during a real time in history, that might mention real events, real people, but that have fictional main characters and a fictional sequence of events within that setting. Or some stories that are about a real historical person and real time, but the dialogue and actual details that must be filled in are made-up to create a fuller story.



Are these two different names of the same thing or completely different?










share|improve this question































    11


















    I have seen two similar terms, historical fiction and creative non-fiction. I'm writing some stories that are set during a real time in history, that might mention real events, real people, but that have fictional main characters and a fictional sequence of events within that setting. Or some stories that are about a real historical person and real time, but the dialogue and actual details that must be filled in are made-up to create a fuller story.



    Are these two different names of the same thing or completely different?










    share|improve this question



























      11













      11









      11


      1






      I have seen two similar terms, historical fiction and creative non-fiction. I'm writing some stories that are set during a real time in history, that might mention real events, real people, but that have fictional main characters and a fictional sequence of events within that setting. Or some stories that are about a real historical person and real time, but the dialogue and actual details that must be filled in are made-up to create a fuller story.



      Are these two different names of the same thing or completely different?










      share|improve this question














      I have seen two similar terms, historical fiction and creative non-fiction. I'm writing some stories that are set during a real time in history, that might mention real events, real people, but that have fictional main characters and a fictional sequence of events within that setting. Or some stories that are about a real historical person and real time, but the dialogue and actual details that must be filled in are made-up to create a fuller story.



      Are these two different names of the same thing or completely different?







      creative-writing genre historical-fiction historical






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Sep 29 at 13:03









      VillageVillage

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          1 Answer
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          17



















          Creative non-fiction recounts factually-accurate narratives in a literary style. It reads like a story, but it is in fact real history. It will be severely criticised for containing factual inaccuracies, let alone fictional main characters. (wiki)



          Historical fiction, on the other hand, is fiction, set in some specific period in the past. The period and its events play a part in the story, but the main characters or their actions are ultimately fictional. Ivanhoe and The Three Musketeers are famous examples. (wiki)



          Since your main characters are fictional, what you're writing is historical fiction.






          share|improve this answer






















          • 1





            Example of creative non-fiction: Apollo 13 (which does contain a few factual inaccuracies, but for the most part it sticks pretty close to historical fact).

            – Kevin
            Sep 30 at 15:22











          • What if you recount factually accurate historic events from the perspective of a main character who is fictional but could plausibly have been present at these events, yet weren't named in any historic records because they themselves were too insignificant? Like a maid at the court of Henry VIII or a prison guard at the Bastille during the French revolution? If such a character would recount those events as accurate as historically possible, wouldn't it also be creative non-fiction?

            – Philipp
            Sep 30 at 15:52












          • @Philipp That sounds like "literary style".

            – Barmar
            Sep 30 at 16:00











          • This gets a little confusing - looks like "fictionalization" process would produce "creative non-fiction"?

            – Alexander
            Sep 30 at 17:42












          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

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          active

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          17



















          Creative non-fiction recounts factually-accurate narratives in a literary style. It reads like a story, but it is in fact real history. It will be severely criticised for containing factual inaccuracies, let alone fictional main characters. (wiki)



          Historical fiction, on the other hand, is fiction, set in some specific period in the past. The period and its events play a part in the story, but the main characters or their actions are ultimately fictional. Ivanhoe and The Three Musketeers are famous examples. (wiki)



          Since your main characters are fictional, what you're writing is historical fiction.






          share|improve this answer






















          • 1





            Example of creative non-fiction: Apollo 13 (which does contain a few factual inaccuracies, but for the most part it sticks pretty close to historical fact).

            – Kevin
            Sep 30 at 15:22











          • What if you recount factually accurate historic events from the perspective of a main character who is fictional but could plausibly have been present at these events, yet weren't named in any historic records because they themselves were too insignificant? Like a maid at the court of Henry VIII or a prison guard at the Bastille during the French revolution? If such a character would recount those events as accurate as historically possible, wouldn't it also be creative non-fiction?

            – Philipp
            Sep 30 at 15:52












          • @Philipp That sounds like "literary style".

            – Barmar
            Sep 30 at 16:00











          • This gets a little confusing - looks like "fictionalization" process would produce "creative non-fiction"?

            – Alexander
            Sep 30 at 17:42















          17



















          Creative non-fiction recounts factually-accurate narratives in a literary style. It reads like a story, but it is in fact real history. It will be severely criticised for containing factual inaccuracies, let alone fictional main characters. (wiki)



          Historical fiction, on the other hand, is fiction, set in some specific period in the past. The period and its events play a part in the story, but the main characters or their actions are ultimately fictional. Ivanhoe and The Three Musketeers are famous examples. (wiki)



          Since your main characters are fictional, what you're writing is historical fiction.






          share|improve this answer






















          • 1





            Example of creative non-fiction: Apollo 13 (which does contain a few factual inaccuracies, but for the most part it sticks pretty close to historical fact).

            – Kevin
            Sep 30 at 15:22











          • What if you recount factually accurate historic events from the perspective of a main character who is fictional but could plausibly have been present at these events, yet weren't named in any historic records because they themselves were too insignificant? Like a maid at the court of Henry VIII or a prison guard at the Bastille during the French revolution? If such a character would recount those events as accurate as historically possible, wouldn't it also be creative non-fiction?

            – Philipp
            Sep 30 at 15:52












          • @Philipp That sounds like "literary style".

            – Barmar
            Sep 30 at 16:00











          • This gets a little confusing - looks like "fictionalization" process would produce "creative non-fiction"?

            – Alexander
            Sep 30 at 17:42













          17















          17











          17









          Creative non-fiction recounts factually-accurate narratives in a literary style. It reads like a story, but it is in fact real history. It will be severely criticised for containing factual inaccuracies, let alone fictional main characters. (wiki)



          Historical fiction, on the other hand, is fiction, set in some specific period in the past. The period and its events play a part in the story, but the main characters or their actions are ultimately fictional. Ivanhoe and The Three Musketeers are famous examples. (wiki)



          Since your main characters are fictional, what you're writing is historical fiction.






          share|improve this answer
















          Creative non-fiction recounts factually-accurate narratives in a literary style. It reads like a story, but it is in fact real history. It will be severely criticised for containing factual inaccuracies, let alone fictional main characters. (wiki)



          Historical fiction, on the other hand, is fiction, set in some specific period in the past. The period and its events play a part in the story, but the main characters or their actions are ultimately fictional. Ivanhoe and The Three Musketeers are famous examples. (wiki)



          Since your main characters are fictional, what you're writing is historical fiction.







          share|improve this answer















          share|improve this answer




          share|improve this answer








          edited Sep 29 at 14:33







          user16226

















          answered Sep 29 at 13:42









          Galastel supports GoFundMonicaGalastel supports GoFundMonica

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          • 1





            Example of creative non-fiction: Apollo 13 (which does contain a few factual inaccuracies, but for the most part it sticks pretty close to historical fact).

            – Kevin
            Sep 30 at 15:22











          • What if you recount factually accurate historic events from the perspective of a main character who is fictional but could plausibly have been present at these events, yet weren't named in any historic records because they themselves were too insignificant? Like a maid at the court of Henry VIII or a prison guard at the Bastille during the French revolution? If such a character would recount those events as accurate as historically possible, wouldn't it also be creative non-fiction?

            – Philipp
            Sep 30 at 15:52












          • @Philipp That sounds like "literary style".

            – Barmar
            Sep 30 at 16:00











          • This gets a little confusing - looks like "fictionalization" process would produce "creative non-fiction"?

            – Alexander
            Sep 30 at 17:42












          • 1





            Example of creative non-fiction: Apollo 13 (which does contain a few factual inaccuracies, but for the most part it sticks pretty close to historical fact).

            – Kevin
            Sep 30 at 15:22











          • What if you recount factually accurate historic events from the perspective of a main character who is fictional but could plausibly have been present at these events, yet weren't named in any historic records because they themselves were too insignificant? Like a maid at the court of Henry VIII or a prison guard at the Bastille during the French revolution? If such a character would recount those events as accurate as historically possible, wouldn't it also be creative non-fiction?

            – Philipp
            Sep 30 at 15:52












          • @Philipp That sounds like "literary style".

            – Barmar
            Sep 30 at 16:00











          • This gets a little confusing - looks like "fictionalization" process would produce "creative non-fiction"?

            – Alexander
            Sep 30 at 17:42







          1




          1





          Example of creative non-fiction: Apollo 13 (which does contain a few factual inaccuracies, but for the most part it sticks pretty close to historical fact).

          – Kevin
          Sep 30 at 15:22





          Example of creative non-fiction: Apollo 13 (which does contain a few factual inaccuracies, but for the most part it sticks pretty close to historical fact).

          – Kevin
          Sep 30 at 15:22













          What if you recount factually accurate historic events from the perspective of a main character who is fictional but could plausibly have been present at these events, yet weren't named in any historic records because they themselves were too insignificant? Like a maid at the court of Henry VIII or a prison guard at the Bastille during the French revolution? If such a character would recount those events as accurate as historically possible, wouldn't it also be creative non-fiction?

          – Philipp
          Sep 30 at 15:52






          What if you recount factually accurate historic events from the perspective of a main character who is fictional but could plausibly have been present at these events, yet weren't named in any historic records because they themselves were too insignificant? Like a maid at the court of Henry VIII or a prison guard at the Bastille during the French revolution? If such a character would recount those events as accurate as historically possible, wouldn't it also be creative non-fiction?

          – Philipp
          Sep 30 at 15:52














          @Philipp That sounds like "literary style".

          – Barmar
          Sep 30 at 16:00





          @Philipp That sounds like "literary style".

          – Barmar
          Sep 30 at 16:00













          This gets a little confusing - looks like "fictionalization" process would produce "creative non-fiction"?

          – Alexander
          Sep 30 at 17:42





          This gets a little confusing - looks like "fictionalization" process would produce "creative non-fiction"?

          – Alexander
          Sep 30 at 17:42


















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