Category:Fantastic Sapient Species Tropes: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
No edit summary
 
(6 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 2: Line 2:
If there's a race of non-human, non-monster sapient beings in your fiction, you're most likely looking at either [[Sci Fi]] or [[Fantasy]]. Further, the race probably has characteristics drawn from a common set of tropes. These are some of those tropes.
If there's a race of non-human, non-monster sapient beings in your fiction, you're most likely looking at either [[Sci Fi]] or [[Fantasy]]. Further, the race probably has characteristics drawn from a common set of tropes. These are some of those tropes.


Writing an entirely different race is hard. There's a lot of detail to manage, and to communicate to the reader. Some writers go to extreme lengths in inventive originality -- this tends to become the focus of the work, whether intentionally or otherwise. Strategies adopted by writers for dealing with these difficulties include drawing the race more or less directly from some stock template with which the audience will be familiar, going to the [[Planet of Hats]], or, at the furthest extreme, just giving up on the "fantastic" part of this trope altogether. Original ''[[Star Trek the Original Series (TV)|Star Trek the Original Series]]'' Klingons, supposedly an "alien race", famously look and act almost perfectly human.
Writing an entirely different race is hard. There's a lot of detail to manage, and to communicate to the reader. Some writers go to extreme lengths in inventive originality -- this tends to become the focus of the work, whether intentionally or otherwise. Strategies adopted by writers for dealing with these difficulties include drawing the race more or less directly from some stock template with which the audience will be familiar, going to the [[Planet of Hats]], or, at the furthest extreme, just giving up on the "fantastic" part of this trope altogether. Original ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series|Star Trek the Original Series]]'' Klingons, supposedly an "alien race", famously look and act almost perfectly human.


[[Eldritch Abomination|Races defined by their sheer unintelligent monstrosity]] generally don't fall under this set of tropes. Mythical creatures are covered by [[Our Monsters Are Different]].
[[Eldritch Abomination|Races defined by their sheer unintelligent monstrosity]] generally don't fall under this set of tropes. Mythical creatures are covered by [[Our Monsters Are Different]].


{{hardline}}
{{hardline}}
{{quote| '''Statler''': I wonder why they keep mentioning life on other planets.<br />
{{quote|'''Statler''': I wonder why they keep mentioning life on other planets.
'''Waldorf''': Why should they care? They don't have lives on this one!<br />
'''Waldorf''': Why should they care? They don't have lives on this one!
'''[[Statler and Waldorf|Both]]''': Dohohohoho! }}
'''[[Statler and Waldorf|Both]]''': Dohohohoho! }}
{{hardline}}
{{hardline}}
Line 15: Line 15:
[[Category:Otherness Tropes]]
[[Category:Otherness Tropes]]
[[Category:Characters As Device]]
[[Category:Characters As Device]]
[[Category:Index Index/Sandbox]]
[[Category:Genre Tropes]]
[[Category:Genre Tropes]]
[[Category:Index of Fictional Creatures]]
[[Category:Index of Fictional Creatures]]
[[Category:Index Index]]
[[Category:Urban Fantasy Tropes]]
[[Category:index]]
[[Category:Fantastic Sapient Species Tropes]]

Latest revision as of 19:20, 21 August 2018


If there's a race of non-human, non-monster sapient beings in your fiction, you're most likely looking at either Sci Fi or Fantasy. Further, the race probably has characteristics drawn from a common set of tropes. These are some of those tropes.

Writing an entirely different race is hard. There's a lot of detail to manage, and to communicate to the reader. Some writers go to extreme lengths in inventive originality -- this tends to become the focus of the work, whether intentionally or otherwise. Strategies adopted by writers for dealing with these difficulties include drawing the race more or less directly from some stock template with which the audience will be familiar, going to the Planet of Hats, or, at the furthest extreme, just giving up on the "fantastic" part of this trope altogether. Original Star Trek the Original Series Klingons, supposedly an "alien race", famously look and act almost perfectly human.

Races defined by their sheer unintelligent monstrosity generally don't fall under this set of tropes. Mythical creatures are covered by Our Monsters Are Different.


Statler: I wonder why they keep mentioning life on other planets.
Waldorf: Why should they care? They don't have lives on this one!
Both: Dohohohoho!


Subcategories

This category has the following 3 subcategories, out of 3 total.

A

E

N

Pages in category "Fantastic Sapient Species Tropes"

The following 96 pages are in this category, out of 96 total.