Go Back   Alternate History Discussion Board > Discussion > Alternate History Discussion: Before 1900

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old July 20th, 2012, 06:14 PM
Makemakean Makemakean is offline
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 1000 or more
Backwards Alternate History?

Something I've for a long time been curious about is whether somebody has ever attempted to do a proper attempt at alternate history backwards? Every single timeline I've come across on this forum hitherto has either begun with a What If? asked regarding a specific historical even occurring in another way, or begun by stating a particular desired outcome, followed by a progression thereto from a chosen point in history.

However, I've never come across somebody trying to do the impossible, namely beginning by stating a scenario, and then trying to work out where the point of divergence was completely backwards. Deducing, figuring out or inventing the causes continually from the effect, in each step of the way.

Clearly this is very, very difficult, but as far as what human ingenuity has demonstrated to me so far, it shouldn't be possible. So, I'm wondering, has this ever been attempted at this forum, and if it hasn't, has anyone here ever thought about this as well?
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old July 20th, 2012, 06:21 PM
Lycaon pictus Lycaon pictus is offline
Fugitive from TL-191
 
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 757
Sort of an AH.com Memento? The hard part would be writing it so nobody guesses the PoD before the ending.
__________________
The Dead Skunk: 1820 — the year of Gambit Pileup!
2013 Turtledove Winner The Day the Icecap Died
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old July 20th, 2012, 06:23 PM
Makemakean Makemakean is offline
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 1000 or more
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lycaon pictus View Post
Sort of an AH.com Memento? The hard part would be writing it so nobody guesses the PoD before the ending.
Yes and no.

The idea is that not even the writer(s) would know it. They would have to work it out along the way. Kind of like how some writers out there write their books backwards.
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old July 20th, 2012, 06:34 PM
Marc Pasquin Marc Pasquin is offline
43 % pure, 57 % recycled sins
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: I live in da land down unda'
Posts: 1000 or more
I think there's been a few timelines that were written with the end result in mind and then justification was looked for afterward. For example, something I've been working on off and on is a timeline with France being, in the modern era, a country that resonate among the general public with countries like Burgundy or the ottoman empire (i.e. locals might know about it but outside of historians, most people around the world would be buggered to know about it).

The problem is that without knowing exactly what caused it, you must make many assumptions that later need to be rewritten as you discover other avenues further in the past that seem more promising or that would simply negate them.
__________________
READ MY MIGHTY TIMELINES AND TREMBLE ! (or guffaw, up to you...)
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old July 20th, 2012, 06:56 PM
Makemakean Makemakean is offline
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 1000 or more
Quote:
Originally Posted by Marc Pasquin View Post
The problem is that without knowing exactly what caused it, you must make many assumptions that later need to be rewritten as you discover other avenues further in the past that seem more promising or that would simply negate them.
That may very well be true, but I think that if you are strict enough with your rules, and are careful about what you write about previous events and limit the "reverse foreshadowing" ("backshadowing"? ) it shouldn't be a technical impossibility, in my mind...

After all, games with highly complex rules may very well have some charm in their rules themselves...
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old July 20th, 2012, 07:02 PM
Baron Bizarre Baron Bizarre is online now
Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Barony of Greymatter, the Holy Roman Empire of the Terrestrial Nation
Posts: 331
I've thought of stuff like that (for some reason, the scenario of Japanese samurai fighting Roman legionaries in the Rocky Mountains - both at a 1917 OTL level of technology - sticks in my mind), but I'm not no-how a good enough historian to attempt trying to "backwards engineer" a scenario that implausible.
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old July 20th, 2012, 08:04 PM
Marc Pasquin Marc Pasquin is offline
43 % pure, 57 % recycled sins
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: I live in da land down unda'
Posts: 1000 or more
Quote:
Originally Posted by Makemakean View Post
That may very well be true, but I think that if you are strict enough with your rules, and are careful about what you write about previous events and limit the "reverse foreshadowing" ("backshadowing"? ) it shouldn't be a technical impossibility, in my mind...

After all, games with highly complex rules may very well have some charm in their rules themselves...
If you're willing to suspend disbelief a bit, you can always adopt the QSS and QAA rules that the Ill Bethisad group did. Quod Scripsi Scripsi means that a given fact cannot be changed once introduced into the timeline and that further additions must work around it even if (and especialy if) it would seem at first glance to contradict its existence. Quod Assumpsi Assumpsi on the other hand goes with the assumption that anything not written yet have gone along similar to OTL inasmuch as they alowed facts that fall under QSS to exist.

If you start with something that appear at first glance to be far removed from our TL but want to stay within "hard" AH, you would probably need to have some slightly far fetched explanation for some elements. For the roman legionaires fighting samurais in the rocky example given above, you might have to have the 2 groups having come from some ren-fair type events with the POD being secondary. If they were actual people fitting with that description, the changes to that TL would be so great that you should forget about keeping it hardcore and simply follow the QSS and QAA rules I described before.
__________________
READ MY MIGHTY TIMELINES AND TREMBLE ! (or guffaw, up to you...)
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old July 20th, 2012, 08:09 PM
TyranicusMaximus TyranicusMaximus is offline
Irrational Statist
 
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Otto-wank Virginia
Posts: 959
Eurofed's timelines didn't go backwards in time, but they were justifications for the Scenarios, instead of the other way around.
__________________
Quote:
Originally Posted by Georgepatton View Post
No wonder Israel has so many problems there: Southern Lebanon isn't kosher!
Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old July 20th, 2012, 08:40 PM
Makemakean Makemakean is offline
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 1000 or more
Quote:
Originally Posted by Marc Pasquin View Post
If you're willing to suspend disbelief a bit, you can always adopt the QSS and QAA rules that the Ill Bethisad group did. Quod Scripsi Scripsi means that a given fact cannot be changed once introduced into the timeline and that further additions must work around it even if (and especialy if) it would seem at first glance to contradict its existence. Quod Assumpsi Assumpsi on the other hand goes with the assumption that anything not written yet have gone along similar to OTL inasmuch as they alowed facts that fall under QSS to exist.

If you start with something that appear at first glance to be far removed from our TL but want to stay within "hard" AH, you would probably need to have some slightly far fetched explanation for some elements. For the roman legionaires fighting samurais in the rocky example given above, you might have to have the 2 groups having come from some ren-fair type events with the POD being secondary. If they were actual people fitting with that description, the changes to that TL would be so great that you should forget about keeping it hardcore and simply follow the QSS and QAA rules I described before.
Now this I like.

A lot.

All I need to do now, in other words, is to cook up a map and begin working my way backwards, right?

Where can I find a blank version of that great world map I see everyone using around here! I'm gonna give this one a try!

Seriously!

EDIT: Actually, wait.. I'm gonna do this without a map. It's actually easier then!
Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old July 20th, 2012, 11:08 PM
Desmond Hume Desmond Hume is offline
Amerikansky tovarishch
 
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: On a magical island
Posts: 569
I've been forming plans to do a kind of backwards timeline lately, if I ever find time for it. I was trying to think of ways to bring my long-dormat timeline Under the Eagle Flag to a conclusion, and I came up with the idea of telling the story through a series of short biographies of political figures. Then I thought, why not start with the most recent character (circa 2000) and work backwards?

So be on the lookout for that in a couple months.
__________________
Under the Eagle Flag 2.0
Reply With Quote
  #11  
Old July 21st, 2012, 12:27 AM
Makemakean Makemakean is offline
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 1000 or more
Quote:
Originally Posted by Desmond Hume View Post
I've been forming plans to do a kind of backwards timeline lately, if I ever find time for it. I was trying to think of ways to bring my long-dormat timeline Under the Eagle Flag to a conclusion, and I came up with the idea of telling the story through a series of short biographies of political figures. Then I thought, why not start with the most recent character (circa 2000) and work backwards?

So be on the lookout for that in a couple months.
I, for one, certainly will, as will I remember to read your timeline.
Reply With Quote
  #12  
Old July 21st, 2012, 12:45 AM
Ganesha Ganesha is offline
શિવા બાળક
 
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Illinois, USA
Posts: 1000 or more
Now this is interesting, because this is essentially where my in-development timeline came from.

I wanted a world where Chicago was bigger, more powerful, more prosperous, and generally even more successful than OTL. Then I set about thinking about how that might happen.

I've now found a very good POD, and am starting work on laying out a detailed outline of the timeline, which I hope to begin posting early this fall.

Cheers,
Ganesha
__________________
"After silence, that which comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music.” Aldous Huxley
Reply With Quote
  #13  
Old July 21st, 2012, 08:36 PM
Thande Thande is online now
Is back
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: University of Sheffield
Posts: 1000 or more
This has kind of been done a few times in the form of map challenges: a snapshot of a different world and then you try and figure back to the POD that might have produced it.

A few TLs have been derived from this, in particular Flocculencio's "Anglo-Dutch Empire" and my own "Look to the West". In both cases though it is not a strict derivation because inevitably in the course of matters you discover bits that won't fit or work and you change them. For example, my first LTTW map sketch set in 1860 had a "Confederation of Bolivaria" in South America. While the actual LTTW indeed has a powerful state of the same type I was thinking of in that role, it does not use the name Bolivaria because I later realised that the POD would have to extend far back enough to butterfly Simon Bolivar away.
Reply With Quote
  #14  
Old July 21st, 2012, 08:41 PM
Grey Wolf Grey Wolf is online now
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Deepest Wales
Posts: 1000 or more
I more or less do this with most stories I write - there was one where I created a great 18th century world to underpin it, but it was written on a rented computer and saved on floppy disc and no longer exists.

Best Regards
Grey Wolf
Reply With Quote
  #15  
Old July 21st, 2012, 08:43 PM
Killer300 Killer300 is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 1000 or more
I actually want to try this, however the problem is I don't have the historical knowledge to do it.
Reply With Quote
  #16  
Old July 21st, 2012, 08:44 PM
Thande Thande is online now
Is back
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: University of Sheffield
Posts: 1000 or more
Quote:
Originally Posted by Killer300 View Post
I actually want to try this, however the problem is I don't have the historical knowledge to do it.
I didn't when I started; I acquired the knowledge on the journey as I did it.
Reply With Quote
  #17  
Old July 21st, 2012, 08:49 PM
Killer300 Killer300 is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 1000 or more
Ah, interesting.

Well, hopefully I can gain the knowledge to get a 2nd American Civil War actually be plausible, however I get the feeling PODs are going to be difficult, to say the least.
Reply With Quote
  #18  
Old July 21st, 2012, 09:34 PM
Grey Wolf Grey Wolf is online now
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Deepest Wales
Posts: 1000 or more
Quote:
Originally Posted by Killer300 View Post
Ah, interesting.

Well, hopefully I can gain the knowledge to get a 2nd American Civil War actually be plausible, however I get the feeling PODs are going to be difficult, to say the least.
Ah, but that can be the beauty of this approach - you don't start at the end then go straight back to the beginning, you can find your way back to where your beginning makes logical sense by jumping back through the decades, significant event at a time.

Best Regards
Grey Wolf
Reply With Quote
  #19  
Old July 21st, 2012, 09:51 PM
Makemakean Makemakean is offline
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 1000 or more
Quote:
Originally Posted by Grey Wolf View Post
Ah, but that can be the beauty of this approach - you don't start at the end then go straight back to the beginning, you can find your way back to where your beginning makes logical sense by jumping back through the decades, significant event at a time.

Best Regards
Grey Wolf
Quite. You set up the 2nd American Civil War such as what issue it is that is being fought over, which the different factions are, where they are seated, so forth and so on. Then you work out how the war broke out, the triggering event as to speak. You decide upon Gavrillo Princip, Franz Ferdinand and Sarajevo before you work out how the Austro-Hungarian Empire looked like and its backstory in the Balkans. Then you work out that... and so forth and so on. And try to make things look less and less divergent from our time. Until you finally reach, say, Samuel Tilden winning South Carolina and the election of 1876.
Reply With Quote
  #20  
Old July 21st, 2012, 09:58 PM
Shawn Endresen Shawn Endresen is offline
Member. Of everything.
 
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Fu-Sang
Posts: 1000 or more
Send a message via Yahoo to Shawn Endresen
Isn't this the entire point/premise of DBWIs? Which are, after all, not everyone's cup of tea.
__________________
Mankind will occasionally stumble across the truth, but most times he will pick himself up and carry on.

--Winston Churchill


Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 03:13 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.