Historical Fictions Research Conference 2026
Historical Fictions Research Conference, Erlangen (Germany),
19th-20th February 2026
Call for Papers
Deadline: 1st September 2025
The Historical Fictions Research Network aims to create a place for the discussion of all aspects of the construction of the historical narrative. The focus of the conference is the way we construct history, the narratives and fictions people assemble and how. We welcome both academic and practitioner presentations. The Network addresses a wide variety of disciplines, including Archaeology, Architecture, Art History, Cartography, Cultural Studies, Film Studies, Gaming, Gender, Geography, History, Larping, Linguistics, Literature, Media Studies, Memory Studies, Museum Studies, Musicology, Politics, Queer Studies, Race, Reception Studies, Re-enactment, Transformative Works.
For the 2026 conference, the HFRN will engage in scholarly discussions on the topic of feelings and emotions in historical fictions.
As the genre’s original name ‘historical romance’ suggests, emotions have been central to historical fiction since its inception. Thus, the study of historical fictions makes significant contributions to the history of emotions, which, as Ute Frevert puts it, is primarily concerned with analysing “what emotions do in and to history” (31). Hilary Mantel, for instance, remarked that working as a historical novelist requires her to “unfreeze antique feeling, unlock the emotion stored and packed tight in paper, brick and stone”. Instead of straightforwardly recording or giving an account of past feelings, historical fictions are also significantly influenced by present emotions, both on the side of its producers and consumers. Analysing feelings and emotions in historical fictions thus involves focussing both on the aesthetic modes and emotional repertoires that are employed in representing the past as well as on the potential effects they produce in the reception process, for instance with regards to feelings of pleasure, anger, nostalgia, or empathy.
The political dimensions of emotions are equally significant, as they “shape the ‘surfaces’ of individual and collective bodies” (Ahmed 1), impacting power relations and social identities. Emotions function strategically in political contexts – they are deployed to unify or divide, to legitimise authority or contest injustice, and to construct narratives of belonging or otherness. Historical fictions, by engaging with these affective dynamics, open a critical space to interrogate how emotions operate within and across nations, communities, and temporalities. In addressing themes such as colonialism and racism, historical fictions reveal how feelings like nostalgia can both obscure and challenge histories of domination and displacement, while also enabling postcolonial reflections on memory and identity. Similarly, grief and mourning, increasingly recognised in environmental humanities, resonate in historical narratives that engage with ecological emergencies and invite reflections on loss and responsibility that bridge past and present. Encompassing a broad spectrum of cultural texts, historical fictions mediate the interplay of personal and collective emotions, exploring how they shape political discourses, influence public opinion, and inform responses to crises, both historical and contemporary.
A further highly relevant aspect of historical fiction’s engagement with emotions is the question of mediality, even intermediality. A fruitful field of research in connection with historical fictions in general, this bears special attention when focusing on emotions. The type of emotions evoked and the way in which they are created and/or enhanced can depend heavily on media-specific methods and conventions. Vincent M. Gaine points to the inherent potential of historical film for working with emotions to create a closer engagement with the past: “Emotion connects viewers to individuals, and films direct the viewer’s attention through narrative, cinematography, editing, performance, and indeed the presence of certain performers” (56). The varying shapes historical fictions can take, the emotions different types of media work with, and the different levels of ambiguity between emotions of the past and present thus open up important discussions on the interplay between history and emotions.
Papers are invited on topics related but not limited to:
- evoking feelings/emotions on the level of content (depictions of significant historical events/periods, or figures, use of emotional tropes)
- evoking feelings/emotions on an aesthetic/stylistic level (narrative situation, stylistic and filmic devices, mise-en-scène, music)
- evoking feelings/emotions on the level of characters (emotions of characters, audience’s/readers’ engagement with characters for instance in terms of sympathy or antipathy)
- historical fiction and the politics of emotion (affective polarisation/culture wars, political instrumentalisation of the past, the reparative potential of emotions)
- emotions and questions of (inter-)mediality/genre (heritage/costume drama, historical romance, etc.)
- repertoires of emotions (including nostalgia, mourning, love, happiness, pleasure, etc.)
- theoretical and conceptual approaches (affect studies, sentimentality, postcolonial melancholia, grievability)
- perspectives/approaches from audience and reception studies, adaptation studies, re-enactment studies, public history
- the history of emotions
- emotions and identities (gender/sexuality, race/ethnicity, class, age, etc.)
- ambiguity of emotions
References:
Ahmed, Sara. The Cultural Politics of Emotion. 2nd Ed. (Edinburgh University Press, 2014)
Frevert, Ute. Writing the History of Emotions: Concepts and Practices, Economies and Politics (Routledge, 2019).
Gaine, Vincent M. “Last (White) Man Standing: The Philosophy of Racial Responsibility in The Last of the Mohicans and The Last Samurai.” In: Bringing History to Life Through Film: The Art of Cinematic Storytelling, edited by Kathryn Anne Morey (Rowman & Littlefield, 2013).
Mantel, Hilary. “Author, Author: Unfreezing Antique Feeling.” The Guardian, 15 Aug. 2009, https://www.theguardian.com/books/2009/aug/15/hilary-mantel.
Keynote Speakers:
Heike Paul, Professor of American Studies, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg
Christine Lehnen, Lecturer in English and Creative Writing, University of Exeter, and author
Further Details
HFRC 2026 will be an in-person event taking place at Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (Germany). The venue is situated in the city centre of Erlangen (Kollegienhaus, Universitätsstraße 15), 5 minutes walking-distance from Erlangen train station. The nearest airports are Nuremberg (30 minutes by airport bus), Munich (2,5 hours by train) and Frankfurt/Main (3 hours by train).
The organisers are Dr. Dennis Henneböhl and Dr. Isabel Kalous, FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg, and Alina Aulbur, University of Siegen.
Proposals (max. 250 words) for 20-minute papers with a short bio note (max. 150 words) are due 1st September 2025 via the submission form on our website (https://historicalfictionsresearch.org/hfrn-conference-2026/). Papers must be presented in English.
Contact
alina.aulbur@uni-siegen.de
dennis.henneboehl@fau.de
isabel.kalous@fau.de