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Anachronism

An anachronism (from the Greek ἀνά ana, 'against' and χρόνος khronos, 'time') is a chronological inconsistency in some arrangement, especially a juxtaposition of people, events, objects, language terms and customs from different time periods. The most common type of anachronism is an object misplaced in time, but it may be a verbal expression, a technology, a philosophical idea, a musical style, a material, a plant or animal, a custom, or anything else associated with a particular period that is placed outside its proper temporal domain.

Ancient Greek Orpheus with a violin (invented in the 16th century) rather than a lyre. A 17th-century painting by Cesare Gennari

An anachronism may be either intentional or unintentional. Intentional anachronisms may be introduced into a literary or artistic work to help a contemporary audience engage more readily with a historical period. Anachronism can also be used intentionally for purposes of rhetoric, propaganda, comedy, or shock. Unintentional anachronisms may occur when a writer, artist, or performer is unaware of differences in technology, terminology and language, customs and attitudes, or even fashions between different historical periods and eras.

Types edit

 
The Nuremberg Chronicle (1493) shows ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle in scholar's clothing of the book's time, 1,800 years too modern for Aristotle.
 
1723 depiction of the Irish High King Brian Boru (died 1014) showing him wearing plate armor (developed in the 15th century) and holding a coat of arms (only introduced after the Anglo-Norman invasion). In the background is the green harp flag (first used in 1642) and the Comerford Crown, which dates from the Bronze Age.

Parachronism edit

A parachronism (from the Greek παρά, "on the side", and χρόνος, "time") is anything that appears in a time period in which it is not normally found (though not sufficiently out of place as to be impossible).

This may be an object, idiomatic expression, technology, philosophical idea, musical style, material, custom, or anything else so closely bound to a particular time period as to seem strange when encountered in a later era. They may be objects or ideas that were once common but are now considered rare or inappropriate. They can take the form of obsolete technology or outdated fashion or idioms.

Prochronism edit

A prochronism (from the Greek πρό, "before", and χρόνος, "time") is an impossible anachronism which occurs when an object or idea has not yet been invented when the situation takes place, and therefore could not have possibly existed at the time. A prochronism may be an object not yet developed, a verbal expression that had not yet been coined, a philosophy not yet formulated, a breed of animal not yet evolved or bred, or use of a technology that had not yet been created.

Behavioral and cultural anachronism edit

The intentional use of older cultural artifacts may be regarded by some as anachronistic. For example, it could be considered anachronistic for a modern-day person to wear a top hat or write with a quill. Such choices may reflect an eccentricity or an aesthetic preference.

Politically motivated anachronism edit

Works of art and literature promoting a political, nationalist or revolutionary cause may use anachronism to depict an institution or custom as being more ancient than it actually is, or otherwise intentionally blur the distinctions between past and present. For example, the 19th-century Romanian painter Constantin Lecca depicts the peace agreement between Ioan Bogdan Voievod and Radu Voievod—two leaders in Romania's 16th-century history—with the flags of Moldavia (blue-red) and of Wallachia (yellow-blue) seen in the background. These flags date only from the 1830s: anachronism promotes legitimacy for the unification of Moldavia and Wallachia into the Kingdom of Romania at the time the painting was made.[citation needed] The Russian artist Vasily Vereshchagin, in his painting Suppression of the Indian Revolt by the English (c. 1884), depicts the aftermath of the Indian Rebellion of 1857, when mutineers were executed by being blown from guns. In order to make the argument that the method of execution would again be utilized by the British if another rebellion broke out in India, Vereshchagin depicted the British soldiers conducting the executions in late 19th-century uniforms.[1]

Art and literature edit

 
Lawrence Alma-Tadema (1868). Flower market in Roman times, with a cactus and two agaves.[2] Cacti and agaves are originally American plants.

Anachronism is used especially in works of imagination that rest on a historical basis. Anachronisms may be introduced in many ways: for example, in the disregard of the different modes of life and thought that characterize different periods, or in ignorance of the progress of the arts and sciences and other facts of history. They vary from glaring inconsistencies to scarcely perceptible misrepresentation. Anachronisms may be the unintentional result of ignorance, or may be a deliberate aesthetic choice.[3]

Sir Walter Scott justified the use of anachronism in historical literature: "It is necessary, for exciting interest of any kind, that the subject assumed should be, as it were, translated into the manners as well as the language of the age we live in."[4] However, as fashions, conventions and technologies move on, such attempts to use anachronisms to engage an audience may have quite the reverse effect, as the details in question are increasingly recognized as belonging neither to the historical era being represented, nor to the present, but to the intervening period in which the artwork was created. "Nothing becomes obsolete like a period vision of an older period", writes Anthony Grafton; "Hearing a mother in a historical movie of the 1940s call out 'Ludwig! Ludwig van Beethoven! Come in and practice your piano now!' we are jerked from our suspension of disbelief by what was intended as a means of reinforcing it, and plunged directly into the American bourgeois world of the filmmaker."[5]

It is only since the beginning of the 19th century that anachronistic deviations from historical reality have jarred on a general audience. C. S. Lewis wrote:

All medieval narratives about the past are ... lacking in a sense of period.... It was known that Adam went naked till he fell. After that, [medieval people] pictured the whole past in terms of their own age. So indeed did the Elizabethans. So did Milton; he never doubted that "capon and white broth" would have been as familiar to Christ and the disciples as to himself. It is doubtful whether the sense of period is much older than the Waverley novels. It is hardly present in Gibbon. Walpole's Otranto, which would not now deceive schoolchildren, could hope, not quite vainly, to deceive the public of 1765. Where even the most obvious and superficial distinctions between one century (or millennium) and another were ignored, the profounder differences of temper and mental climate were naturally not dreamed of.... [In Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde], [t]he manners, the fighting, the religious services, the very traffic-regulations of his Trojans, are fourteenth-century.[6]

Anachronisms abound in the works of Raphael[7] and Shakespeare,[8] as well as in those of less celebrated painters and playwrights of earlier times. Carol Meyers says that anachronisms in ancient texts can be used to better understand the stories by asking what the anachronism represents.[9] Repeated anachronisms and historical errors can become an accepted part of popular culture, such as the belief that Roman legionaries wore leather armor.[10]

 
Dinosaurs co-existing with hominids, as in The Flintstones, is a relatively common anachronistic depiction in comics and animated cartoons.

Comical anachronism edit

Comedy fiction set in the past may use anachronism for humorous effect. Comedic anachronism can be used to make serious points about both historical and modern society, such as drawing parallels to political or social conventions.[12]

Future anachronism edit

 
A 1931 Amazing Stories cover has future space technology advanced enough for a large-scale colonization of Mars alongside propeller airplanes.

Even with careful research, science fiction writers risk anachronism as their works age because they cannot predict all political, social, and technological change.[13]

For example, many books, television shows, radio productions and films nominally set in the mid-21st century or later refer to the Soviet Union, to Saint Petersburg in Russia as Leningrad, to the continuing struggle between the Eastern and Western Blocs and to divided Germany and divided Berlin.[citation needed] Star Trek has suffered from future anachronisms; instead of "retconning" these errors, the 2009 film retained them for consistency with older franchises.[14]

Buildings or natural features, such as the World Trade Center in New York City, can become out of place once they disappear,[15] with some works having been edited to remove the World Trade Center to avoid this situation.

Futuristic technology may appear alongside technology which would be obsolete by the time in which the story is set. For example, in the stories of Robert A. Heinlein, interplanetary space travel coexists with calculation using slide rules.[16]

Language anachronism edit

Language anachronisms in novels and films are quite common, both intentional and unintentional.[17] Intentional anachronisms inform the audience more readily about a film set in the past. In this regard, language and pronunciation change so fast that most modern people (even many scholars) would find it difficult, or even impossible, to understand a film with dialogue in 15th-century English; thus, audiences willingly accept characters speaking an updated language, and modern slang and figures of speech are often used in these films.[18]

Subconscious anachronism edit

 
A Russian commemorative coin of 1995 depicting Soviet and American troops meeting at Torgau in 1945. It shows the 50-star U.S. flag, first used in 1960, instead of the 48-star flag used at the time.

Unintentional anachronisms may occur even in what are intended as wholly objective and accurate records or representations of historic artifacts and artworks, because the perspectives of historical recorders are conditioned by the assumptions and practices of their own times, in a form of cultural bias. One example is the attribution of historically inaccurate beards to various medieval tomb effigies and figures in stained glass in records made by English antiquaries of the late 16th and early 17th centuries. Working in an age in which beards were in fashion and widespread, the antiquaries seem to have subconsciously projected the fashion back into an era in which they were rare.[19]

In academia edit

In historical writing, the most common type of anachronism is the adoption of the political, social or cultural concerns and assumptions of one era to interpret or evaluate the events and actions of another. The anachronistic application of present-day perspectives to comment on the historical past is sometimes described as presentism. Empiricist historians, working in the traditions established by Leopold von Ranke in the 19th century, regard this as a great error, and a trap to be avoided.[20] Arthur Marwick has argued that "a grasp of the fact that past societies are very different from our own, and ... very difficult to get to know" is an essential and fundamental skill of the professional historian; and that "anachronism is still one of the most obvious faults when the unqualified (those expert in other disciplines, perhaps) attempt to do history".[21]

Detection of forgery edit

The ability to identify anachronisms may be employed as a critical and forensic tool to demonstrate the fraudulence of a document or artifact purporting to be from an earlier time. Anthony Grafton discusses, for example, the work of the 3rd-century philosopher Porphyry, of Isaac Casaubon (1559–1614), and of Richard Reitzenstein (1861–1931), all of whom succeeded in exposing literary forgeries and plagiarisms, such as those included in the "Hermetic Corpus", through – among other techniques – the recognition of anachronisms.[22] The detection of anachronisms is an important element within the scholarly discipline of diplomatics, the critical analysis of the forms and language of documents, developed by the Maurist scholar Jean Mabillon (1632–1707) and his successors René-Prosper Tassin (1697–1777) and Charles-François Toustain (1700–1754). The philosopher and reformer Jeremy Bentham wrote at the beginning of the 19th century:

The falsehood of a writing will often be detected, by its making direct mention of, or allusions more or less indirect to, some fact posterior to the date which it bears. ... The mention of posterior facts; – first indication of forgery.
In a living language there are always variations in words, in the meaning of words, in the construction of phrases, in the manner of spelling, which may detect the age of a writing, and lead to legitimate suspicions of forgery. ... The use of words not used till after the date of the writing; – second indication of forgery.[23]

Examples are:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Art in December: M. Verestchagin on his Critics – Art and Politics". The Magazine of Art. November 1887 – October 1888. Cassell. 11: ix (following p. 430). 1878–1904.
  2. ^ Succulenta 2017
  3. ^ Potthast, Jane (2013-09-18). "For Infidelity: Reconsidering Aesthetic Anachronism". PopMatters. Retrieved 2014-06-11.
  4. ^ Scott, Walter (1820). Ivanhoe; a Romance. Vol. 1. Edinburgh. p. xvii.
  5. ^ Grafton 1990, p. 67.
  6. ^ Lewis, C. S. (1964). The Discarded Image: an introduction to medieval and Renaissance literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 182–84. OL 5918225M.
  7. ^ von Wolzogen, Alfred Freiherr (1866). Raphael Santi: His Life and His Works. Smith, Elder & Co. p. 232.
  8. ^ Martindale, Michelle (2005). Shakespeare and the Uses of Antiquity: An Introductory Essay. Routledge. pp. 121–125. ISBN 9781134848508.
  9. ^ Montagne, Renee (2014-02-14). "Archaeology Find: Camels In 'Bible' Are Literary Anachronisms". NPR. Retrieved 2014-06-15.
  10. ^ Cole, Tom (2011-03-31). . Radio Times. Archived from the original on 2021-04-29. Retrieved 2014-07-31.
  11. ^ Saint Dominic presiding over an Auto-da-fe at Prado Museum
  12. ^ van Riper, A. Bowdoin (2013-09-26). "Hollywood, History, and the Art of the Big Anachronism". PopMatters. Retrieved 2014-06-11.
  13. ^ Athans, Philip; Salvatore, R. A. (2010). The Guide to Writing Fantasy and Science Fiction. Adams Media. pp. 167–170. ISBN 9781440507298.
  14. ^ Glaskowsky, Peter (2009-05-08). "Living the Star Trek life". CNET. Retrieved 2014-06-11.
  15. ^ Hornaday, Ann (2002-12-06). "'Empire': Gangster Tale Sleeps With the Fishes". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2014-06-11.
  16. ^ Lyons, Michele (9 June 2016). "Sliding Through Science History, Part 2". NIH Intramural Research Program. Retrieved April 9, 2021.
  17. ^ Nunberg, Geoff (2013-02-26). "Historical Vocab: When We Get It Wrong, Does It Matter?". NPR. Retrieved 2014-06-11.
  18. ^ Safire, William (2000-03-26). "The Way We Live Now: 3-26-00: On Language; Anachronism". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-07-31.
  19. ^ Harris, Oliver D. (2013). "Beards: true and false". Church Monuments. 28: 124–32.
  20. ^ Davies, Stephen (2003). Empiricism and History. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 29.
  21. ^ Marwick, Arthur (2001). The New Nature of History: knowledge, evidence, language. Basingstoke: Palgrave. p. 63. ISBN 0-333-96447-0.
  22. ^ Grafton 1990, pp. 75–98.
  23. ^ Bentham, Jeremy (1825). Dumont, Étienne (ed.). A Treatise on Judicial Evidence. London: Baldwin, Cradock and Joy. p. 140.
  24. ^ "Anti-Semitic Myth: The Franklin "Prophecy"". Adl.org. Retrieved 2013-02-01.
  25. ^ Cobb, W. Jelani (2004). . Archived from the original on 2016-02-19. Retrieved 27 July 2016.

Bibliography edit

  • Grafton, Anthony (1990). Forgers and Critics: creativity and duplicity in Western scholarship. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691055440.

External links edit

anachronism, card, strategy, game, game, anachronism, from, greek, ἀνά, against, χρόνος, khronos, time, chronological, inconsistency, some, arrangement, especially, juxtaposition, people, events, objects, language, terms, customs, from, different, time, period. For the card strategy game see Anachronism game An anachronism from the Greek ἀna ana against and xronos khronos time is a chronological inconsistency in some arrangement especially a juxtaposition of people events objects language terms and customs from different time periods The most common type of anachronism is an object misplaced in time but it may be a verbal expression a technology a philosophical idea a musical style a material a plant or animal a custom or anything else associated with a particular period that is placed outside its proper temporal domain Ancient Greek Orpheus with a violin invented in the 16th century rather than a lyre A 17th century painting by Cesare GennariAn anachronism may be either intentional or unintentional Intentional anachronisms may be introduced into a literary or artistic work to help a contemporary audience engage more readily with a historical period Anachronism can also be used intentionally for purposes of rhetoric propaganda comedy or shock Unintentional anachronisms may occur when a writer artist or performer is unaware of differences in technology terminology and language customs and attitudes or even fashions between different historical periods and eras Contents 1 Types 1 1 Parachronism 1 2 Prochronism 1 3 Behavioral and cultural anachronism 2 Politically motivated anachronism 3 Art and literature 3 1 Comical anachronism 3 2 Future anachronism 3 3 Language anachronism 4 Subconscious anachronism 5 In academia 6 Detection of forgery 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksTypes editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The Nuremberg Chronicle 1493 shows ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle in scholar s clothing of the book s time 1 800 years too modern for Aristotle nbsp 1723 depiction of the Irish High King Brian Boru died 1014 showing him wearing plate armor developed in the 15th century and holding a coat of arms only introduced after the Anglo Norman invasion In the background is the green harp flag first used in 1642 and the Comerford Crown which dates from the Bronze Age Parachronism edit A parachronism from the Greek para on the side and xronos time is anything that appears in a time period in which it is not normally found though not sufficiently out of place as to be impossible This may be an object idiomatic expression technology philosophical idea musical style material custom or anything else so closely bound to a particular time period as to seem strange when encountered in a later era They may be objects or ideas that were once common but are now considered rare or inappropriate They can take the form of obsolete technology or outdated fashion or idioms Prochronism edit A prochronism from the Greek pro before and xronos time is an impossible anachronism which occurs when an object or idea has not yet been invented when the situation takes place and therefore could not have possibly existed at the time A prochronism may be an object not yet developed a verbal expression that had not yet been coined a philosophy not yet formulated a breed of animal not yet evolved or bred or use of a technology that had not yet been created Behavioral and cultural anachronism edit The intentional use of older cultural artifacts may be regarded by some as anachronistic For example it could be considered anachronistic for a modern day person to wear a top hat or write with a quill Such choices may reflect an eccentricity or an aesthetic preference Politically motivated anachronism editWorks of art and literature promoting a political nationalist or revolutionary cause may use anachronism to depict an institution or custom as being more ancient than it actually is or otherwise intentionally blur the distinctions between past and present For example the 19th century Romanian painter Constantin Lecca depicts the peace agreement between Ioan Bogdan Voievod and Radu Voievod two leaders in Romania s 16th century history with the flags of Moldavia blue red and of Wallachia yellow blue seen in the background These flags date only from the 1830s anachronism promotes legitimacy for the unification of Moldavia and Wallachia into the Kingdom of Romania at the time the painting was made citation needed The Russian artist Vasily Vereshchagin in his painting Suppression of the Indian Revolt by the English c 1884 depicts the aftermath of the Indian Rebellion of 1857 when mutineers were executed by being blown from guns In order to make the argument that the method of execution would again be utilized by the British if another rebellion broke out in India Vereshchagin depicted the British soldiers conducting the executions in late 19th century uniforms 1 nbsp Moldavians and Muntenians become Brothers 19th century flags in a 16th century scene nbsp Suppression of the Indian Revolt by the English events of the 1850s with soldiers in uniforms of the 1880sArt and literature edit nbsp Lawrence Alma Tadema 1868 Flower market in Roman times with a cactus and two agaves 2 Cacti and agaves are originally American plants Anachronism is used especially in works of imagination that rest on a historical basis Anachronisms may be introduced in many ways for example in the disregard of the different modes of life and thought that characterize different periods or in ignorance of the progress of the arts and sciences and other facts of history They vary from glaring inconsistencies to scarcely perceptible misrepresentation Anachronisms may be the unintentional result of ignorance or may be a deliberate aesthetic choice 3 Sir Walter Scott justified the use of anachronism in historical literature It is necessary for exciting interest of any kind that the subject assumed should be as it were translated into the manners as well as the language of the age we live in 4 However as fashions conventions and technologies move on such attempts to use anachronisms to engage an audience may have quite the reverse effect as the details in question are increasingly recognized as belonging neither to the historical era being represented nor to the present but to the intervening period in which the artwork was created Nothing becomes obsolete like a period vision of an older period writes Anthony Grafton Hearing a mother in a historical movie of the 1940s call out Ludwig Ludwig van Beethoven Come in and practice your piano now we are jerked from our suspension of disbelief by what was intended as a means of reinforcing it and plunged directly into the American bourgeois world of the filmmaker 5 It is only since the beginning of the 19th century that anachronistic deviations from historical reality have jarred on a general audience C S Lewis wrote All medieval narratives about the past are lacking in a sense of period It was known that Adam went naked till he fell After that medieval people pictured the whole past in terms of their own age So indeed did the Elizabethans So did Milton he never doubted that capon and white broth would have been as familiar to Christ and the disciples as to himself It is doubtful whether the sense of period is much older than the Waverley novels It is hardly present in Gibbon Walpole s Otranto which would not now deceive schoolchildren could hope not quite vainly to deceive the public of 1765 Where even the most obvious and superficial distinctions between one century or millennium and another were ignored the profounder differences of temper and mental climate were naturally not dreamed of In Chaucer s Troilus and Criseyde t he manners the fighting the religious services the very traffic regulations of his Trojans are fourteenth century 6 Anachronisms abound in the works of Raphael 7 and Shakespeare 8 as well as in those of less celebrated painters and playwrights of earlier times Carol Meyers says that anachronisms in ancient texts can be used to better understand the stories by asking what the anachronism represents 9 Repeated anachronisms and historical errors can become an accepted part of popular culture such as the belief that Roman legionaries wore leather armor 10 nbsp Lot and His Daughters a painting of c 1520 shows Biblical Sodom as a typical Dutch city of the painter s time nbsp St Dominic active in the 13th century shown presiding over an auto da fe ceremony of a kind only instituted more than two hundred years after his death 11 nbsp The Embarkation of the Queen of Sheba a 1648 painting by Claude Lorrain showing the arrival of the Queen of Sheba on 17th century sailing ships with Renaissance style buildings nbsp Charlemagne wearing the Imperial Crown of the Holy Roman Empire by Albrecht Durer c 1512 The crown was made a century and a half after Charlemagne s death nbsp Dinosaurs co existing with hominids as in The Flintstones is a relatively common anachronistic depiction in comics and animated cartoons Comical anachronism edit Comedy fiction set in the past may use anachronism for humorous effect Comedic anachronism can be used to make serious points about both historical and modern society such as drawing parallels to political or social conventions 12 Future anachronism edit See also Retrofuturism nbsp A 1931 Amazing Stories cover has future space technology advanced enough for a large scale colonization of Mars alongside propeller airplanes Even with careful research science fiction writers risk anachronism as their works age because they cannot predict all political social and technological change 13 For example many books television shows radio productions and films nominally set in the mid 21st century or later refer to the Soviet Union to Saint Petersburg in Russia as Leningrad to the continuing struggle between the Eastern and Western Blocs and to divided Germany and divided Berlin citation needed Star Trek has suffered from future anachronisms instead of retconning these errors the 2009 film retained them for consistency with older franchises 14 Buildings or natural features such as the World Trade Center in New York City can become out of place once they disappear 15 with some works having been edited to remove the World Trade Center to avoid this situation Futuristic technology may appear alongside technology which would be obsolete by the time in which the story is set For example in the stories of Robert A Heinlein interplanetary space travel coexists with calculation using slide rules 16 Language anachronism edit Language anachronisms in novels and films are quite common both intentional and unintentional 17 Intentional anachronisms inform the audience more readily about a film set in the past In this regard language and pronunciation change so fast that most modern people even many scholars would find it difficult or even impossible to understand a film with dialogue in 15th century English thus audiences willingly accept characters speaking an updated language and modern slang and figures of speech are often used in these films 18 Subconscious anachronism edit nbsp A Russian commemorative coin of 1995 depicting Soviet and American troops meeting at Torgau in 1945 It shows the 50 star U S flag first used in 1960 instead of the 48 star flag used at the time Unintentional anachronisms may occur even in what are intended as wholly objective and accurate records or representations of historic artifacts and artworks because the perspectives of historical recorders are conditioned by the assumptions and practices of their own times in a form of cultural bias One example is the attribution of historically inaccurate beards to various medieval tomb effigies and figures in stained glass in records made by English antiquaries of the late 16th and early 17th centuries Working in an age in which beards were in fashion and widespread the antiquaries seem to have subconsciously projected the fashion back into an era in which they were rare 19 In academia editSee also Presentism historical analysis In historical writing the most common type of anachronism is the adoption of the political social or cultural concerns and assumptions of one era to interpret or evaluate the events and actions of another The anachronistic application of present day perspectives to comment on the historical past is sometimes described as presentism Empiricist historians working in the traditions established by Leopold von Ranke in the 19th century regard this as a great error and a trap to be avoided 20 Arthur Marwick has argued that a grasp of the fact that past societies are very different from our own and very difficult to get to know is an essential and fundamental skill of the professional historian and that anachronism is still one of the most obvious faults when the unqualified those expert in other disciplines perhaps attempt to do history 21 Detection of forgery editThe ability to identify anachronisms may be employed as a critical and forensic tool to demonstrate the fraudulence of a document or artifact purporting to be from an earlier time Anthony Grafton discusses for example the work of the 3rd century philosopher Porphyry of Isaac Casaubon 1559 1614 and of Richard Reitzenstein 1861 1931 all of whom succeeded in exposing literary forgeries and plagiarisms such as those included in the Hermetic Corpus through among other techniques the recognition of anachronisms 22 The detection of anachronisms is an important element within the scholarly discipline of diplomatics the critical analysis of the forms and language of documents developed by the Maurist scholar Jean Mabillon 1632 1707 and his successors Rene Prosper Tassin 1697 1777 and Charles Francois Toustain 1700 1754 The philosopher and reformer Jeremy Bentham wrote at the beginning of the 19th century The falsehood of a writing will often be detected by its making direct mention of or allusions more or less indirect to some fact posterior to the date which it bears The mention of posterior facts first indication of forgery In a living language there are always variations in words in the meaning of words in the construction of phrases in the manner of spelling which may detect the age of a writing and lead to legitimate suspicions of forgery The use of words not used till after the date of the writing second indication of forgery 23 Examples are The exposure by Lorenzo Valla in 1440 of the so called Donation of Constantine a decree purportedly issued by the Emperor Constantine the Great in either 315 or 317 AD as a later forgery depended to a considerable degree on the identification of anachronisms such as references to the city of Constantinople a name not in fact bestowed until 330 AD A large number of apparent anachronisms in the Book of Mormon have served to convince critics that the book was written in the 19th century and not as its adherents claim in pre Columbian America The use of 19th and 20th century anti semitic terminology demonstrates that the purported Franklin Prophecy attributed to Benjamin Franklin who died in 1790 is a forgery 24 The William Lynch speech an address supposedly delivered in 1712 on the control of slaves in Virginia is now considered to be a 20th century forgery partly on account of its use of anachronistic terms such as program and refueling 25 See also edit1812 Overture Anachronism of nationalist motifs Anachronisms in the Book of Mormon Anatopism Evolutionary anachronism Invented traditions List of stories set in a future now past Retrofuturism Skeuomorph Society for Creative Anachronism Steampunk Whig historyReferences edit Art in December M Verestchagin on his Critics Art and Politics The Magazine of Art November 1887 October 1888 Cassell 11 ix following p 430 1878 1904 Succulenta 2017 Potthast Jane 2013 09 18 For Infidelity Reconsidering Aesthetic Anachronism PopMatters Retrieved 2014 06 11 Scott Walter 1820 Ivanhoe a Romance Vol 1 Edinburgh p xvii Grafton 1990 p 67 Lewis C S 1964 The Discarded Image an introduction to medieval and Renaissance literature Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 182 84 OL 5918225M von Wolzogen Alfred Freiherr 1866 Raphael Santi His Life and His Works Smith Elder amp Co p 232 Martindale Michelle 2005 Shakespeare and the Uses of Antiquity An Introductory Essay Routledge pp 121 125 ISBN 9781134848508 Montagne Renee 2014 02 14 Archaeology Find Camels In Bible Are Literary Anachronisms NPR Retrieved 2014 06 15 Cole Tom 2011 03 31 Time meddlers anachronisms in print and on film Radio Times Archived from the original on 2021 04 29 Retrieved 2014 07 31 Saint Dominic presiding over an Auto da fe at Prado Museum van Riper A Bowdoin 2013 09 26 Hollywood History and the Art of the Big Anachronism PopMatters Retrieved 2014 06 11 Athans Philip Salvatore R A 2010 The Guide to Writing Fantasy and Science Fiction Adams Media pp 167 170 ISBN 9781440507298 Glaskowsky Peter 2009 05 08 Living the Star Trek life CNET Retrieved 2014 06 11 Hornaday Ann 2002 12 06 Empire Gangster Tale Sleeps With the Fishes The Washington Post Retrieved 2014 06 11 Lyons Michele 9 June 2016 Sliding Through Science History Part 2 NIH Intramural Research Program Retrieved April 9 2021 Nunberg Geoff 2013 02 26 Historical Vocab When We Get It Wrong Does It Matter NPR Retrieved 2014 06 11 Safire William 2000 03 26 The Way We Live Now 3 26 00 On Language Anachronism The New York Times Retrieved 2014 07 31 Harris Oliver D 2013 Beards true and false Church Monuments 28 124 32 Davies Stephen 2003 Empiricism and History Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan p 29 Marwick Arthur 2001 The New Nature of History knowledge evidence language Basingstoke Palgrave p 63 ISBN 0 333 96447 0 Grafton 1990 pp 75 98 Bentham Jeremy 1825 Dumont Etienne ed A Treatise on Judicial Evidence London Baldwin Cradock and Joy p 140 Anti Semitic Myth The Franklin Prophecy Adl org Retrieved 2013 02 01 Cobb W Jelani 2004 Is Willie Lynch s Letter Real Archived from the original on 2016 02 19 Retrieved 27 July 2016 Bibliography editGrafton Anthony 1990 Forgers and Critics creativity and duplicity in Western scholarship Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 0691055440 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Anachronism nbsp The dictionary definition of anachronism at Wiktionary nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Anachronism Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anachronism amp oldid 1191899855, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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