The Ongoing Alternate History Onslaught: Philip Roth’s "The Plot Against America" to be an HBO Miniseries
The news that HBO has decided to produce Philip Roth’s novel,
The Plot Against America, as a
miniseries confirms that alternate history
has never been more popular in American popular culture.
As I’ve chronicled on this blog, there have been numerous
novels, films, television programs, and streaming web series that have appeared
to public acclaim in the last several years.
They include:
·
Ben Winters, Underground
Airlines
·
David Means, Hystopia
·
Kate Atkinson, Life After Life
·
Nava Semel, Isra
Isle
·
Steven King, 11.22.63
(also a Hulu series)
·
Timeless
(NBC)
·
Making
History (Fox)
·
Confederate
(announced by HBO and still pending)
·
1983 (forthcoming on Netflix)
Within this larger body of work, alternate histories of Nazism
have been especially popular.
They include:
·
Lavie Tidhar,
A Man Lies Dreaming
·
Simone Zelitch, Judenstaat
·
Timur Vermes, Look Who’s Back (Netflix)
·
The Man in
the High Castle (Amazon Prime’s adaptation of Philip K. Dick’s novel)
·
SS-GB (BBC2’s
adaptation of Len Deighton’s novel)
·
The Hunt (Amazon’s
upcoming Jordan Peele-produced show, about Nazi hunters in 1970s America. it’s unclear whether this will be a secret
history or alternate history, but let’s keep our options open for now).
And now comes The Plot
Against America.
The reason for the genre’s popularity is obvious. The surge of right-wing political activity in
today’s America has made many of us fear for our future and prompted us to seek
guidance from narratives that describe how events might have unfolded
differently in the past.
Some critics have recently argued that such dystopian
narratives have become too much of an emotional burden in an era of heightened anxiety. See “Dear
Television, I Can’t Handle Another Prestige Drama About a Fascist Dystopia”).
Yet, based on the success of The Handmaids Tale, The Leftovers, and
other likeminded dystopian series, they speak to the national mood. Alternate histories of Nazism are the most
politically explicit expressions of this mood and I am excited that they are getting
the big budget treatment by the Amazons, Netflixes, and HBO’s of the world.
I am convinced that they serve a salutary function by
prompting us to think more deeply about the origins and consequences of
historical events.
As for The Plot
Against America, I am confident that HBO will remain faithful to the novel’s
narrative, but I am curious to see how the network will handle the novel’s
final section, where Roth ran out of gas and provided a rough outline – instead
of a fleshed-out account – of how America ultimately avoids a dystopian
fate.
HBO will have a lot of flexibility
in deciding how to pursue this climactic section. In fact, it has a great opportunity to
improve on the original.
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