Zoe
Strimpel
The Netflix generation has lost its grip on
history
9 February
2021, 6:02am
From
Spectator Life
https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/the-netflix-generation-has-lost-its-grip-on-history/
The first
thing you notice about Bridgerton, Netflix’s big winter blockbuster set in
Regency England, is how bad it is: an expensive assemblage of clichés that
smacks of the American’s-eye view of Britain’s aristocratic past. The dialogue
is execrable, the ladies’ pouts infuriating. But bad things can be good,
especially when it comes to sexy period romps. Bridgerton is no different. The
story follows the elder children of the Bridgerton family as they look for love
in a utopian sprawl of courtly landscape and sociality. Based on Julia Quinn’s
best-selling novel and adapted for Netflix by Shonda Rhimes (writer and
producer of multi-season binge classic Gray’s Anatomy), the invitation to let
one’s hair down and enjoy the ride – dialogue be damned – is a powerful one.
Over 80 million households have accepted it so far.
But there
is more to Bridgerton than sex, corsetry and calling cards. It is the most
audacious example yet in a growing pantheon of historical drama that peddles a
vision of the past crudely shaped by present-day preoccupations. People worry
about fake news. I worry about fake history.
Popular
representations of history have always bent to fit contemporary tastes and, to
some degree, ideologies. But there are ways to do this with verve or subtlety;
the BBC’s uproarious Gentleman Jack is a good example, which was based on the
private letters of the 19th century lesbian estate owner Ann Lister. The first
few seasons of Call the Midwife did at least try to capture the feel of
post-war Britain, although recent seasons have gone the way of the times:
sentimental and clumsily woke. The same became true of Downton Abbey, which
distorted the realities of class to show an Edwardian Earl agonising about the
comfort and feelings of his servants.
With its
hundreds of millions of viewers, what Netflix decides is history matters
Feminism
started it. Everywhere one looks, notable women are portrayed as
justice-demanding swashbucklers – and sexy too. In Dickinson, a 2019 drama
about the New England poet Emily Dickinson, historical fact gave way to a
message of ‘empowerment’. Dickinson was presented as irreverent, noisy and
sexually fluid. She even twerked to Taylor Swift.
The Great,
Hulu’s 2020 take on Catherine the Great, had no discernible interest in
anything remotely factual, while an HBO miniseries on the Russian queen
expected viewers to welcome a 70-something Helen Mirren playing a 30-something
in perpetual fury about everyday sexism. Jamestown, Sky’s eight-part drama
about early English settlers in America, included feisty young women taking a
stand against being forced to have sex with their husbands.
But
Bridgerton takes historical revisionism further, by focussing on racial
politics, the flashpoint of our time. The apparently colour-blind casting is
refreshing and fun. But viewers who make it to the fourth episode learn that it
is not just a defiant exercise in itself. A revisionist dream underpins the
show in which people of colour have been lifted to the upper echelons of
society because King George III fell in love with ‘one of us’, as Lady Danbury
(Adjoa Andoh) says. ‘Bridgerton has ‘restor[ed] people of color to imagined
all-white spaces like Regency England’, said one critic for New York magazine’s
entertainment site Vulture. That ‘one of us’ is Queen Charlotte, who is black
in Bridgerton’s fictional world, but also, we are made to believe, in the real
world too. This particular storyline seems to be based on a claim made by an
obscure historian called Mario De Valdes y Cocom who has suggested that
Charlotte descended from a Moorish concubine in the Portugese royal house. This
might well be so, but as David Williamson, former co-editor of Debrett’s, put
it: ‘There is a lot of Moorish blood in the Portuguese royal family and it has
diffused over the rest of Europe.’ This hardly means the Queen was ‘black’.
The past is
increasingly being massaged to fit the present fixation with diversity. For
those committed to exposing Britain’s racist, colonialist past, an overhaul of
what counts as historically significant is the first step. Statue toppling is
one approach, ‘decolonising’ the curriculum another. Museums are under pressure
to ensure their collections fit with the contemporary narrative. Is it silly to
worry about the part played by trashy romps in all this? I don’t think so.
History is picked up unconsciously. Over time, assumptions about the way things
were come to shape mass understanding of the way things are. Fiction becomes
fact. With its hundreds of millions of viewers, what Netflix decides is history
matters.
Basic
historical knowledge, after all, is not strong. A recent survey found that one
in ten millennials thought Margaret Thatcher was Prime Minister during World
War One. Nearly half thought it was Churchill. The Crown is Netflix’s jewel of
fake history. It is spectacularly convincing. Amazing efforts were made to
evoke the past convincingly, which gives the show the aura of history. But it
strays from the past whenever it suits the creators. How many viewers would
have known that Thatcher’s decision to go to war over the Falklands wasn’t in
fact an emotional response to her son Mark going missing in Africa? It doesn’t
take much to swing the balance of historical knowledge further and further away
from the truth.
When Oliver
Dowden, the culture secretary, asked Netflix to add a disclaimer stating that
the Crown was only based on real events, it refused. Viewers were instead
warned about upsetting scenes of Diana’s bulimia. But the rise of fake history
on our screens should disturb us too.

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