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  2. Counterfactual history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterfactual_history

    Counterfactual history. Counterfactual history (also virtual history) is a form of historiography that attempts to answer the What if? questions that arise from counterfactual conditions. [ 1] Counterfactual history seeks by "conjecturing on what did not happen, or what might have happened, in order to understand what did happen." [ 2]

  3. List of fictional countries on the Earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional...

    This is a list of fictional countries from published works of fiction (books, films, television series, games, etc.). Fictional works describe all the countries in the following list as located somewhere on the surface of the Earth as we know it – as opposed to underground, inside the planet, on another world, or during a different "age" of the planet with a different physical geography.

  4. Wikipedia:WikiProject Alternate History - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject...

    Welcome to the Alternate History WikiProject! Goals. Improve Wikipedia's coverage of alternate history. Create guidelines for articles about alternate history. Scope. Articles about topics closely linked with alternate history including: novels, short stories/novellas, films, games, comics, and authors. Not in scope: Fiction that merely vaguely ...

  5. The Disunited States of America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Disunited_States_of...

    The Gladiator. The Disunited States of America is an alternate history novel by Harry Turtledove. [1] It is a part of the Crosstime Traffic series, and takes place in an alternate world where the U.S. was never able to agree on a constitution and continued to govern under the Articles of Confederation. By the early 1800s, the nation dissolved ...

  6. Alternate history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternate_history

    A painting by Jakub Różalski depicts an alternate history of the 1920s, in which rural peasants must contend with giant mechanical walking tanks.. Alternate history (also referred to as alternative history, allohistory, [1] althist, or simply AH) is a subgenre of speculative fiction in which one or more historical events have occurred but are resolved differently than in actual history.

  7. List of fictional countries in the Americas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional...

    Countries in Russian Amerika, the alternate history novel, has 20th-century North America made up of several independent sovereign nations: [5] The point of divergence is that the United States lost the Civil War with the Confederacy; and as a post-war consequence, the Union loses all ground west of the Mississippi River as American-claimed ...

  8. Yellow Peril - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellow_Peril

    The racist and cultural stereotypes of the Yellow Peril originated in the late 19th century, when Chinese workers (people of different skin-color and physiognomy, language and culture) legally immigrated to Australia, Canada, the U.S., and New Zealand, where their work ethic inadvertently provoked a racist backlash against Chinese communities, for agreeing to work for lower wages than did the ...

  9. List of alternate history fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_alternate_history...

    This series has made extensive use of alternative history, especially (but not exclusively) since its relaunch in 2005. These include Inferno, Day of the Daleks, Pyramids of Mars (a brief glimpse of a dead Earth), "Father's Day", "Rise of the Cybermen", which follows into "Doomsday". 1966–2005. Star Trek.