Wikipedia:

contemporary fantasy

Fantasy

Fantasy media

Genre studies

Categories

  • Fantasy
  • Fantasy television
  • Fantasy subgenres
  • Fantasy tropes

Contemporary fantasy is a subgenre of fantasy, also known as modern-day fantasy, or indigenous fantasy. These terms are used to describe stories set in the putative real world (often referred to as consensus reality) in contemporary times, in which, it is revealed, magic and magical creatures secretly exist, either living in the interstices of our world (see Wainscot) or leaking over from alternate worlds. It thus has much in common with, and sometimes overlaps with, secret history; a work of fantasy in which the magic could not remain secret does not fit into this subgenre. Occasionally certain contemporary fantasy novels will reference to pop culture.

Novels in which modern characters travel into alternate worlds, and all the magical action takes place there (except for the portal required to transport them), are thus not considered contemporary fantasy.

Contemporary fantasy is also to be distinguished from horror fiction, which also often has contemporary settings. When encountering magical events and creatures, the protagonist of a horror novel is horrified, while the protagonist of a fantasy novel (contemporary or otherwise) is filled with a sense of joy and wonder. Horrifying events may happen, but the fundamental distinction is vital.

Subgenres

Contemporary fantasies often concern places dear to their authors, are full of local color and atmosphere, and attempt to lend a sense of magic to those places, particularly when the subgenre overlaps with mythic fiction.

When the story takes place in a city, the work is often called urban fantasy.

Examples

Contemporary fantasy can also be found on the mainstream fiction shelves in the work of Alice Hoffman (Practical Magic), Louise Erdrich (The Antelope Wife), Chitra Bannerjee Divakaruni (Mistress of Spices), and others.


Another area where contemporary fantasy plays a large role is in Japanese anime story telling.

Superhero fantasy typically is set in contemporary times as well.

References

  • Martin Horstkotte, The postmodern fantastic in contemporary British fiction. WVT, Trier 2004, ISBN 3-88476-679-1
  • Lance Olsen, Ellipse of uncertainty : an introduction to postmodern fantasy. Greenwood Press, Westport 1987, ISBN 0-313-25511-3

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