Historiographic Metafiction and Symbolism in Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code (2003)
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Faculty of Letters and Foreign Languages Department of English
Abstract
This dissertation is an attempt to provide an analytical view of history, and how it became at a
certain point of time neglected, i.e. rejected as an obstacle to the modern beliefs after being in a
prestigious position. After that, history became prominent again after the replacement of modern
ism by the postmodernist literature, or rather a new genre called the Historiographic Metafiction.
This genre aimed to provide the fictional work with a conscious and living quality through ad
dressing the reader directly as well as adding real historical events, places and personages for the
sake mocking and parodyzing or correcting a misunderstanding. We see that the best example to
fulfill such study is by putting Dan Brown’s novel The Da Vinci Code (2003) Under the micro
scope. The aim is to make a projection of some studies of what the postmodernist theory came up
with on Brown’s controversial claims. On the other hand, there is also a symbolist study apart
which seeks to provide dimensional uses of symbolism in order to clarify their importance as a
complement to the events
