Fictionalization
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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Fictionalization or dramatization is to treat as or make into fiction. A clue for noticing a fictionalization is the phrase "based on a true story."
To fictionalize is to retell something real in a work of fiction, especially by fabricating falsehoods or to convert (adaptation) something into a novel or other dramatic work.
Fictionalization should not be confused with appeals to truth in fiction, see false document.
See also
- All persons fictitious disclaimer
- Docudrama
- Docufiction
- Dramatic license
- Dubious anecdotes: Suetonius, Brantome and Tallemant
- Fake memoir
- False document
- Fiction
- Historical fiction
- Histories (history of the novel)
- List of films based on actual events
- Nonfiction novel, also called faction
- Reality
- Revisionism (fictional)
- Roman à clef
- Semidocumentary
- Stranger than fiction
- The story you are about to see is true. The names have been changed to protect the innocent., first used in Dragnet.
- Truth
- Truth is stranger than fiction
- True crime
- Unreliable narrator
- Verisimilitude
Citations
- Poe said in 1840: "The mind of man can imagine nothing which has not really existed."
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