
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Hilary Mantel analyses how historical fiction can make the past come to life. She says her task is to take history out of the archive and relocate it in a body. "It's the novelist's job: to put the reader in the moment, even if the moment is 500 years ago." She takes apart the practical job of "resurrection", and the process that gets historical fiction on to the page. "The historian will always wonder why you left certain things out, while the literary critic will wonder why you left them in," she says. How then does she try and get the balance right?
The lecture is recorded in front of an audience in Exeter, near Mantel's adopted home in East Devon, followed by a question and answer session. The Reith Lectures are chaired by Sue Lawley and produced by Jim Frank.
By BBC Radio 44.3
148148 ratings
Hilary Mantel analyses how historical fiction can make the past come to life. She says her task is to take history out of the archive and relocate it in a body. "It's the novelist's job: to put the reader in the moment, even if the moment is 500 years ago." She takes apart the practical job of "resurrection", and the process that gets historical fiction on to the page. "The historian will always wonder why you left certain things out, while the literary critic will wonder why you left them in," she says. How then does she try and get the balance right?
The lecture is recorded in front of an audience in Exeter, near Mantel's adopted home in East Devon, followed by a question and answer session. The Reith Lectures are chaired by Sue Lawley and produced by Jim Frank.

7,697 Listeners

374 Listeners

890 Listeners

1,063 Listeners

5,541 Listeners

1,797 Listeners

1,763 Listeners

1,035 Listeners

2,099 Listeners

2,015 Listeners

308 Listeners

63 Listeners

234 Listeners

843 Listeners

163 Listeners

67 Listeners

113 Listeners

3,167 Listeners

730 Listeners

1,003 Listeners

3,275 Listeners

754 Listeners

44 Listeners

79 Listeners