When writers mention conflict they are often talking about a
tension between two or more of their characters. However, when Harrogate History Festival hosted a panel on this
theme, conflict meant “battle and action and weapons”.
The panel was chaired by John Henry Clay, whose interest is
late Roman history and the three speakers were A.L.Berridge, who has written
here on the History Girls about the Crimean war, Robyn Young, who created a
weighty trilogy on the Crusades, and the Viking author Rob Low. The following
post is based on my notes of the session.
JHC: Conflict scenes can be the most difficult scenes to
write, and to get right. Of all the “living in the past” historical experiences
the writer might identify with, being in the middle of a battle is the possible
hardest to understand.
Not only does the writer have to meet their reader’s
expectations, the battle scenes have to fit into the full story and be read as
part of the characters life or lives but battles are, by their very nature,
incredibly complex events.
So, what makes a good battle
scene?
ALB: Jeopardy! The character has to have something at stake.
There must be turning points. Even when the historical outcome is known, the
scenes can’t be predictable. You need variety, but there’s more variety in some conflicts
than in others. For example, the Battle of Inkerman took place in thick fog,
which doesn’t offer a great range of opportunities, but the Battle of Balaclava
contains many different elements.
ROB: You need variety to for yourself as a writer, too.
Battle scenes can be hard and exhausting to write, especially if you are
working on a long book. It helps if the battle setting offers a variety of
terrain, or landscape. Variety of action too: you have to find new ways to kill
people and make use of when and where the fight takes place and the range of
weaponry. Is it arm-to-arm fighting in mediaeval alleyways, a campaign across
deserts and plains, or a battle set in the Scottish highlands? It can be hard
to maintain suspense if the reader knows what happens to certain characters.
LOW: There’s also the change that happens within a battle.
For example, Robert the Bruce began the battle with a full range of armour and
accoutrements, riding a fine horse, with pennants flying around him. By the
end, he was on the ground, fighting with barely the shirt on his back. I’d say
that terrain is everything in a battle. Are you fighting from high to low
ground? Is there a water or marsh behind you? Is there a bridge? Are you on
horse or foot? At Bannockburn, the English cavalry were falling on the
infantry, who were trying to escape across a bridge of trampled flesh.
ROB. In a funny way, sex scenes and battle scenes are both
hard to write. Everyone “knows” what’s done, but it is everything that the
individuals bring to the scene that make it interesting.
LOW: Another thing I’ve learned, even through battle
re-enactments, is that time within battle works in an odd way. It is mostly
hours of faffing around followed by a few minutes of sheer, absolute terror and
one-on-one experiences. There’s also the variety of people involved. Remember,
for centuries it was always the “wee guys” who did all the fighting for the
“big guys. The wee men did not have the big plan. They just fought as best they
could, hoping that everyone else around them was doing their job.
JHC: Is it necessary to keep the reader informed of the
wider view of battle and if so, how?
ROB. It depends on what you want to achieve. For example,
when I was writing about the Crusades, I wanted to show the panorama of the
landscape and the larger scale action.
ALB. One advantage in writing about the Charge of the Light Brigade
is that information could be held back: from the point of view of those first
in the Charge, they did not know they were heading for defeat. They did not
know Lord Lucan had turned back.
Historical writers have to take care with
fairly recent history. Readers can be very knowledgeable and sensitive about
the regiments and reputations involved in a battle so get the facts of the
action correct. One way of dealing with this complexity is to show the battle
from several different character’s points of view, including enemy action. This
does mean that you have to plan out the writing of your battle scenes in
advance.
LOW: The climate and seasons and weather will affect your
battle setting too, not just the location on the map. If you visit Bannockburn
at Midsummer, the ground can be rock hard, crossed by little streams here and
there, not a bog or marsh.
JHC: Is the documentation of battles a blessing or a
curse? Before the Crimea, “documentation” usually meant the general’s formal
reports. Since the Crimean war, there have been newspaper articles as well as
many accounts by ordinary people.
ALB: There are so many wonderful accounts, but the downside
is that many or so very, very literate, bringing you the sounds and the smells.
As a write you can’t improve on that, so the only way is to go for another
man’s experience.
LOW: Accounts get changed and re-written. Back in time,
there were the Viking sagas. Originally they were the fragments of tales for
telling around the fire. Then a collector nailed them together in an
often-incoherent way. Even so, such accounts are invaluable as a way of
understanding the ethos of the period and discovering how people thought and
lived and died.
For example, Vikings
didn’t think of wanting battles. They just thought of killing people. Besides, the details are important. You have to remember that you’re writing for
people who may not know the historical details. (People who believe
“Braveheart” to be history, for example! Much laughter.) If you look at the accounts of
the numbers who died, often the wee man aren’t recorded, only the
aristocrats. You have to be careful of
tradition too, and think of the audiences that “historical” writers and
novelists were writing for, and why they were writing.
JHC: Thinking about the writing of your characters, do you
think fighters in the past suffered the same traumas that we hear soldiers
suffering today?
ROB: I’d heard my granddad’s war stories about all the
ordinary difficulties and illnesses. Then, for the Brethren novels, I talked to
a lot of people, both military and medical. Besides, the mind-set in the past
was probably very different. Ordinary people did not matter. They fought when
the call from their lord came and, if they survived, went home back to their
farms. The valuable people were those with riches and property, because they
could be offered for ransom. The first time that we hear of nobles fighting in
battle was in the Second Barons War in the Vale of Evesham when Prince Edward
wept because the battlefield was “covered in bloody red ribbons” of all the
gentry he knew.
ALB: The attitudes of the past and present don’t always
match. Religion was very important to people’s lives and culture in the past,
in the17th Century. Peasant’s lives were always difficult and harsh.
They faced death in so many ways already: disease, injury, starvation,
lawlessness and, for women, childbirth. If daily life has such a high death
rate, dying in battle might not seem so terrible.
LOW: In some societies and times, the acceptance of death
was almost a cult. A Viking would be ashamed to die in his own bed. His
greatest fear would not be death, but the fear of not being brave, of letting
his brother warriors down, an attitude that still exists as part of today’s
squaddie culture.
JHC: What do you feel about the amount of gore needed to
write battle scenes?
ALB: In some ways, “gore” is voyeurish: blood and injuries
seen by the onlooker not the participant. When you are in action in the middle
of a battle, you don’t register such things the same way. You are too busy
worrying about what’s happening next. However, the soldiers involved in the
Charge of the Light Brigade were also spectators, because they were charging at
cannons. They did see heads blown off, horses running with dreadful injuries,
their friends blown apart. The carnage was visible. The survivors, retreating, saw the vultures already gathering on
the bodies of their dead comrades.
ROB: You do a disservice to your readers if you don’t give
them a realistic idea of what the battle was like.
Finally, a couple of the questions from the audience:
How do you approach trying to convey sounds in battle?
ROB: Re-enactment helps. You need to hear the difference
between the sounds. How does a pistol sound? Or a musket? There’s also all the
other sound, such as bugle calls or drums.
ALB: First hand accounts help. Two genuine writers were at
the Crimea, and they recorded the details a sthey . One Captain wrote about the
terrible “slosh” of the cannonball when it hits a human body.
ROB: It’s useful to take part in or attend re-enactments.
For example, chain-mail does not rattle, it “shushes”. (LOW demonstrates
with a handy tunic)
LOW: But in the middle of a battle or fight, your ears may
be covered by a metal helmet so you hear your own breath and not much else. (LOW
demonstrates with three handy helmets, one with no ear-gap, one with, and one
with hinged ear flaps.) ou might pick up bugle calls but you can’t hear
commands. You see the standards and rally towards them.
How do you draw the line between creating a hero and the
horror of war?
ALB: You have to remember that the antihero and the villain
are aspects of the hero.
ROB: Also, you can’t
judge a “hero” by modern sensibilities. You need to find the areas where the
hero and the reader connect.
LOW: Heroes are accretions of other people’s dreams and
hopes. For example, the hero Robert the Bruce was a ruthless, cunning and mean
s-o-b, but he was better at it than most of the others at that time. A hero is a symbol, a figurehead. He is a
human being whose side you can be on. Their task is to do other things and
survive.
ALB. When you write, you try to show both the good and bad
aspects of ordinary human people. In my opinion, Cardigan and Lucan are the
villains of the piece.
Conflict in Fiction was a totally fascinating session, so thank you to
all the speakers quoted here, and apologies for any errors in my note-taking or
attribution.
The first Harrogate History Festival was supported by several history
publishers and planned with the help of the Historical Writers Association. I’m
fortunate in living quite close to The Old Swan Hotel so, while I couldn’t
attend the whole weekend, I was able to drop in and out of sessions and talks.
I’m already watching out for next year and may be offering my notes on a couple of other talks here on History Girls over the next month or so.
Penny Dolan
3 comments:
Fascinating! Thanks for writing this up, Penny.
A VERY useful report - thank you!
Thanks so much for doing this, Penny. I couldn't take notes myself because I was so busy gabbing, but it's lovely to have a record of such a stimulating conversation.
I only wish I'd known you were there! We should have had a drink :(
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