
On the other hand, the inclusion of well-written Magic Realism into the canons of Lit Fic is historically well supported, as Latin America's major 20th-century authors mostly wrote in this genre. Psychic Dreams for Everyone is also widespread.Īmong some people, magical realism is sometimes misused as a term to explain why a work they liked is "literary fiction", and thus allegedly somehow superior to "genre fiction" like Fantasy and Science Fiction. The use of Magic A Is Magic A typically helps the audience accept the incongruity. After all, magic doesn't exist, right? This is the essence of this genre.

What's a Muggle to do after seeing a guy Immune to Bullets? Well, go about his life and do his thing of course. There may very well be vampires and wizards doing what they do, but the Masquerade is upheld. However, everybody is the protagonist in their own story what about the random Muggle who saw something really strange, but never gets an explanation? Well, that Muggle just got the point of view in Magical Realism. To sum it up, magical realism is a story that takes place in an ordinary setting (this excludes futuristic space colonies, lost ancient cities et al.), incorporating spiritual elements (ghosts, spirits, angels, heavens, etc.) where extraordinary or even impossible things are viewed as normal and thus, nobody really bothers to explain why such things happen.Īlso a helpful guideline (again, just a guideline, not a rule): with fantasy, often a character finds out the Broken Masquerade. Nonetheless, there can be no doubt that the story takes place in some sort of mostly normal reality.

Magical realism is often intentionally vague, and (as in Kafka's The Metamorphosis) it can be hard to determine if the protagonist actually is experiencing magical phenomena, or if he's just going insane. It might be worthwhile to point that usually there is a strong correlation between magical realism and Surrealism. Another feature is that the magic which affects reality comes either from a plurality of sources, such as god, black magic, spirits, all at the same time or from no source at all, being like the weather instead. Should the story be told from a first person perspective, then the work in question tends to side more with other genres. One of the easiest ways to distinguish magical realism from other genres is the use given to the omniscient/omnipresent narrator device which can be used one way or another.
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Unlikely stuff like tchotchkes telling the heroine what to do ( Wonderfalls) or the ghost of your father showing up at odd intervals to offer personal and/or professional advice ( Due South) or perhaps it's just a quirky vibe that infuses the environment ( Northern Exposure or better yet, Twin Peaks). It definitely isn't Science Fiction and not quite Urban Fantasy and yet. PAGES WILL BE DELETED OTHERWISE IF THEY ARE MISSING BASIC MARKUP. DON'T MAKE PAGES MANUALLY UNLESS A TEMPLATE IS BROKEN, AND REPORT IT THAT IS THE CASE. THIS SHOULD BE WORKING NOW, REPORT ANY ISSUES TO Janna2000, SelfCloak or RRabbit42. The Trope workshop specific templates can then be removed and it will be regarded as a regular trope page after being moved to the Main namespace.

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