The Time Traveller's Dilemma: Time Travel, Part II

There's also a deeper implication for your story's meaning, however. This is most prominent when the story touches on or centres around major historical events (assuming you've dealt with the time traveller's paradox... quantum theories about the multiverse should help). If your characters can and do change events, the new outcome and how the narrative treats this change-- as positive or negative-- will carry much of the story's values. Similarly, if the characters can theoretically change history and fail to do so you can land straight in the unfortunate implication zone, particularly if these events are man-made tragedies, as we'll discuss more on Friday. The only way I've seen this handled well is when the characters face a choice between 'bad' and 'catastrophic' outcomes, and have to make a terrible choice to let one horror unfold to spare the world something even worse.
If you want to write about characters struggling and failing to change the past, I think the best route is to have a universe where the past is permanent (ie, the time traveller's paradox is in full effect). Much like stories of self-fulfilling prophecies, seeing the characters attempt to alter the past for the better and inadvertently become a critical part of shaping history as we know can be a painful meditation on acceptance if you let the story develop depth.
Published on July 24, 2013 01:59
No comments have been added yet.