The Future of Historical Research & Technology: Reading The Past

Published: March 30, 2022, 7 a.m.

The Buzz 1: It\u2019s easier to write about a period you\u2019ve lived through, but what do you do when everyone who lived during that time is long gone?\u2026The obvious first place to start is with non-fiction books. (Kat Clay) The Buzz 2: Historical nonfiction is a broad category that depicts historical, real-life events\u2026literary nonfiction, narrative nonfiction, creative nonfiction overlap with historical nonfiction. (Masterclass staff) The Buzz 3: Historical fiction can be a tricky genre to master. If you haven't done your homework it won't feel authentic but\u2026no one wants to read a novel that feels like a school history lesson\u2026 don\u2019t chase accuracy too hard. (Hannah Kohler) The Buzz 4: Start with historical nonfiction. Poach bibliographies. Fall down the Google/Pinterest black hole, then dig yourself out. Read historical fiction\u2026carefully\u2026Get your (virtual) hands on memoirs and documents. (Lydia Kang) We\u2019ll ask authors Brad Borkan, Ursula Wong, Sarah Smith and Sharon Yang for their take on \u201cThe Future of Historical Research and Technology: Reading The Past.\u201d