Writer Annalee Newitz on the Perils of Historical Amnesia

The author of the new novel ‘The Future of Another Timeline’ talks to OneZero about what it means to write (and rewrite) history

Lux Alptraum
OneZero

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A photo illustration of the text “The Future of Another Timeline” juxtaposed against a portrait of the author, Annalee Newitz

InIn Annalee Newitz’s new novel, The Future of Another Timeline, a time-traveling band of feminist academics battle against a group of men’s rights activists to see who will determine the course of history. As each group takes steps to alter the past, they leave their imprint on the future, determining whether abortion will be legal and whether women will have the right to vote or be reduced to little more than the property of men.

OneZero sat down with Newitz to chat about real-life attempts to edit the timeline, the forgotten history of feminist activism, and why understanding the past is the key to unlocking our futures.

This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

OneZero: I wanted to start out with a quote from Anthony Levandowski, a self-driving car engineer. “I don’t even know why we study history. It’s entertaining, I guess — the dinosaurs and the Neanderthals and the Industrial Revolution and

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