When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Grimdark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grimdark

    In 2017, the writer Alexandra Rowland proposed that the "opposite of grimdark" is "hopepunk", a trend that emphasizes what grimdark rejects: the importance of hope and the sense that ideals are worth fighting for despite adversity. [15] [16] The novelist Derek B. Miller defined hopepunk as "stories that free the soul from darkness. That ...

  3. Tropes 101: We've Got Your Guide to the Rules of Romance ...

    www.aol.com/tropes-101-weve-got-guide-130000565.html

    Romance writers are excellent at combining tropes, of subverting the traditional view of a trope, and applying tropes to an infinite number of new settings, characters, and conflicts.

  4. Hopepunk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hopepunk

    Newitz views hopepunk as the opposite of apathy. [21] Lee Konstantinou , associate professor of English Literature at University of Maryland, College Park , is skeptical of the genre, saying "You can't just depict an imagined world ravaged by environmental disaster or war or oppression, and then sprinkle a little bit of hope at the end.

  5. Flanderization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flanderization

    Flanderization is a widespread phenomenon in serialized fiction. In its originating show of The Simpsons, it has been discussed both in the context of Ned Flanders and as relating to other characters; Lisa Simpson has been discussed as a classic example of the phenomenon, having, debatably, been even more Flanderized than Flanders himself. [9]

  6. List of genres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_genres

    This is a list of genres of literature and entertainment (film, television, music, and video games), excluding genres in the visual arts.. Genre is the term for any category of creative work, which includes literature and other forms of art or entertainment (e.g. music)—whether written or spoken, audio or visual—based on some set of stylistic criteria.

  7. TV Tropes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TV_Tropes

    TV Tropes was founded in 2004 by a programmer under the pseudonym "Fast Eddie." He described himself as having become interested in the conventions of genre fiction while studying at MIT in the 1970s and after browsing Internet forums in the 1990s. [17]

  8. ‘Fear’ by Huffington Post

    testkitchen.huffingtonpost.com/flip-side-of-fear

    In “The Flip Side of Fear”, we look at some common phobias, like sharks and flying, but also bats, germs and strangers. We tried to identify the origin of these fears and why they continue to exist when logic tells us they shouldn’t.

  9. List of stock characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_stock_characters

    The opposite of the Cousin Oliver: a minor character, usually a sibling of one of the main characters, who is quickly jettisoned when a breakout character emerges from a continuing series. From the point of the character's disappearance, the series treats the character as if they never existed.