British Empire in fiction explained

See main article: British Empire. The British Empire has often been portrayed in fiction. Originally such works described the Empire because it was a contemporary part of life; nowadays fictional references are also frequently made in a steampunk context.

Historical events

This section includes fiction that attempts to re-create historical events.

This is an incomplete list. Please add significant examples in order of date published

Prose

Films

Set in Africa

Set in Australasia

Set in Europe

Set in India

Set in the United States

Television

Period fiction

This section deals with fictional characters set within the wider backdrop of the British Empire.

This is an incomplete list. Please add significant examples in order of date published

Prose

Set on an isolated island

Set in Africa

Set in Asia

Set in India

Set in Australasia

Set in Canada

Set in Europe

Set in the United States

Set in various locations

Theatre

Audio

Films

Set in Africa

Set in Asia

Set in India

Set in Australasia

Set in the Caribbean

Set in Europe

Set in the United States

Television

Other fiction

This section also has works with fictional characters set in the Empire, but also include supernatural or fantastical elements.

This is an incomplete list. Please add significant examples in order of date published

Prose

Comics

Audio

Films

Television

Computer games

Alternative histories

The alternate history section details books that examine what would have happened if history had unfolded differently. A common feature of stories written by American authors is a British victory in the revolutionary war. For novels in which Britain is defeated by Nazi Germany in 1940, see Axis victory in World War II and .

This is an incomplete list. Please add significant examples in order of date published

Comics

Audio

Television

Speculative futures

There are many examples of speculative fiction were a British empire different from the historical empire is featured, but these cannot be called alternative realities, as they are not written from the point of view of a change in the past but as speculations about the future.

This is an incomplete list. Please add significant examples in order of date published

Prose

Films

Notes and References

  1. The New England series by James Philip consists of Empire Day (2018), Two Hundred Lost Years (2018), Travels Through The Wind (2019), Remember Lost Achilles (2019), George Washington's Ghost (2020), and Imperial Crisis (2020)