Characters: Kevin Day, Aaron Minyard, Renee Walker (All For The Game), Allison Reynolds (All For The Game), Nicky Hemmick, Betsy Dobson, Jeremy Knox, Danielle “Dan” Wilds, Matt Boyd.
Wiki | |
Available in | 13 languages[1] |
---|---|
Owner |
|
Website | tvtropes.org |
Alexa rank | 1,697 (May 2018)[3] |
Commercial | Ad-supported |
Registration | Required for editing and other features aside from viewing |
Launched | April 2004; 15 years ago |
Current status | Active |
CC-BY-NC-SA[4] from July 2012 |
TV Tropes is a wiki that collects and documents descriptions and examples of various plot conventions and plot devices, more commonly known as tropes, that are found within many creative works.[5] Since its establishment in 2004, the site has shifted focus from covering only television and film tropes to covering those in other types of media such as literature, comics, manga, video games, music, advertisements, and toys, and their associated fandoms, as well as some non-media subjects such as history, geography and politics.[6][7] The nature of the site as a provider of commentary on pop culture and fiction has attracted attention and criticism from several web personalities and blogs.
The content of the site was published as free content from April 2008.[8] TV Tropes changed its license in July 2012 to allow only noncommercial distribution of its content while continuing to host the prior submissions under the new license.[9][10] TV Tropes has over 395,000 pages.[11]
- 1Site description
- 1.3Article organization
- 3Controversies
Site description[edit]
Ownership[edit]
TV Tropes was founded in 2004 by a programmer under the pseudonym 'Fast Eddie', who 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.[12] The site was sold in 2014 to Drew Schoentrup and Chris Richmond, who then launched a Kickstarter to overhaul the codebase and design.[13]
Content[edit]
Initially focused on the television show Buffy the Vampire Slayer,[5] TV Tropes has since increased its scope to include television series, films, novels, plays, professional wrestling, video games, anime, manga, comic strips/books, fan fiction, and many other subjects, including Internet works such as Wikipedia (referred to in-wiki as 'The Other Wiki').[14] Additionally, articles on the site often relate to real life, or point out real situations where certain tropes can be applied. It has also used its informal style to describe topics such as science, philosophy, politics, and history under its Useful Notes section. TV Tropes does not have notability standards for the works it covers.[15] It also can be used for recommending lesser-known media on the 'Needs More Love' page.
Article organization[edit]
The site includes entries on various series and tropes.[16] An article on a work includes a brief summary of the work in question along with a list of associated tropes. Trope pages are the reverse of articles on works: they give a description of the trope itself, then provide a list of the trope's appearances in various works of media. In this way TV Tropes is fully interconnected through the various connections made between the works and their tropes.
For example, the trope 'I Am Spartacus' is a specific type of scene that appears in multiple works. It refers to scenes where a character is shielded from identification by other characters who are also claiming to be that particular character. The trope name references a famous scene in the film Spartacus.[17] This example is included, along with examples from South Park, Power Rangers in Space, the Talmud and even recent stories from real life. Not all examples of a trope may be cases where it is 'played straight'. They may also include cases where the trope is parodied, played with, inverted or even averted (i.e. avoided altogether in a context where it would be expected).
Subjectivity[edit]
In addition to the tropes, most articles about a work also have a 'Your Mileage May Vary' (YMMV) page with items that are deemed to be subjective.[18] These items are not usually storytelling tropes, but are audience reactions which have been defined and titled. For example, the page of the well known trope 'jumping the shark',[19] the moment at which a series experiences a sharp decline in quality as in the notorious story point in Happy Days,[20] only contains a list of works that reference the phrase. TV Tropes does not apply the term to a show, that being a subjective opinion about the show, but cites uses of the phrase by the show ('in-universe'). Most articles also have various pages within them. For example, the article may have an 'Awesome'[21] page to describe crowning moments of awesome (i.e., a moment in a show or other fictional work that the majority of the readers or viewers regard as one of the high points); a 'Fridge' page which describes examples of the tropes 'Fridge Logic'[22] (issues of a given work's internal consistency that do not typically occur to one until later), as well as the related 'Fridge Horror'[23] and 'Fridge Brilliance';[24] a 'Laconic'[25] page which describes an article/trope in a few short words; and more pages that focus on a particular aspect of an article/item.
Trope descriptions[edit]
Trope description pages are generally created through a standardized launching system, known as the 'Trope Launch Pad' (TLP, formerly 'You Know That Thing Where' [YKTTW]); site members, (referred to as 'Tropers'), can draft a trope description and have the option of providing examples or suggesting refinements to other drafts before launch. While going through TLP is not necessary to launch a trope, it is strongly recommended in order to strengthen the trope as much as possible.[26]
The site has created its own self-referencing meta-trope, known as 'TV Tropes Will Ruin Your Life'. The trope warns that some readers may become jaded and cynical as an unanticipated side effect of reading TV Tropes, '[replacing] surprise almost entirely with recognition,' referring to the inability to read books, watch films, etc. without identifying each trope as it occurs. Also mentioned is that many frequently-contributing community members self-describe themselves as addicted to the site. The community has dubbed the pattern of many tropers as taking a 'Wiki Walk,' starting an edit on an intended article, and subsequently following links from one page to the next for hours on end without intending to, pausing occasionally to add examples the troper notices to the listings or rework articles. In the process, this leads to the discovery of entirely new tropes to analyze, edit, and add examples to. This self-perpetuating cycle of behavior has become the subject of much lampooning for the community, with tongue-in-cheek references being made in the articles for tropes such as 'Brainwashing,' 'Hive Mind,' and Tome of Eldritch Lore (a book of cursed knowledge which infects the reader with obsessive madness).[27]
Expanding scope[edit]
Considerable redesign of some aspects of content organization occurred in 2008, such as the introduction of namespaces, while 2009 saw the arrival of other languages, and as of 2018, its content has been translated into 12 languages: German, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, Polish, Italian, Swedish, Norwegian, Finnish, Romanian and Esperanto.[1] In 2011, TV Tropes branched out into video production, and launched Echo Chamber, a web series about a TV Tropes vlogger explaining and demonstrating tropes.[28]
Reception[edit]
In an interview with TV Tropes co-founder Fast Eddie, Gawker Media's blog io9 described the tone of contributions to the site as 'often light and funny'. Cyberpunk author Bruce Sterling once described its style as a 'wry fanfic analysis'.[29] Essayist Linda Börzsei described TV Tropes as a technological continuum of classical archetypal literary criticisms, capable of deconstructing recurring elements from creative works in an ironic fashion.[30] Economist Robin Hanson, inspired by a scholarly analysis of Victorian literature,[31] suggests TV Tropes offers a veritable treasure trove of information about fiction – a prime opportunity for research into its nature.[32] In Lifehacker, Nick Douglas compared TV Tropes to Wikipedia, recommending to 'use [TV Tropes] when Wikipedia feels impenetrable, when you want opinions more than facts, or when you've finished a Wikipedia page and now you want the juicy parts, the hard-to-confirm bits that Wikipedia doesn't share.'[33]
Controversies[edit]
Mature content incident[edit]
In October 2010, in what the site refers to as 'The Google Incident', Google temporarily withdrew its AdSense service from the site after determining that pages regarding adult and mature tropes were inconsistent with its terms of service.[34][35]
In a separate incident in 2012, in response to other complaints by Google, TV Tropes changed its guidelines to restrict coverage of sexist tropes and rape tropes. Feminist blog The Mary Sue criticized this decision, as it censored documentation of sexist tropes in video games and young adult fiction.[36]ThinkProgress additionally condemned Google AdSense itself for 'providing a financial disincentive to discuss' such topics.[37] The site now separates NSFG articles (Not Safe for Google) from SFG articles (Safe for Google) in order to allow discussion of these kinds of tropes.[34] They also stopped allowing pages for pornographic tropes, works, and fanfiction following the incident.
Licensing and content forks[edit]
TV Tropes content was licensed since April 2008 with the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike (CC-BY-SA)[8][38] license for free content. In July 2012, the site changed its license notice and its existing content to the incompatible Attribution-Noncommercial-ShareAlike version (CC-BY-NC-SA).[39][40] In November 2013, TV Tropes added a clause to their Terms of Use requiring all contributors to grant the site irrevocable, exclusive ownership of their contributions.[4][41][42] In March 2015, this clause was removed, replaced with an assertion that TV Tropes does not claim ownership of user generated content.[43] The site license also states that it is not required to attribute user content to its authors,[44] although the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-ShareAlike license requires attribution of the original author.
Regarding these and other concerns of re-licensing and advertising, a wiki called All The Tropes forked all the content from TV Tropes with the original CC-BY-SA license in late 2013. Authors of the fork attributed several actions of taking commercial rights over what is published on its website, censorship, and failing to comply with the original license to TV Tropes managers.[45] Some editors raised concerns that keeping the content submitted with the previous copyleft license at TV Tropes is illegal, as the re-licensing had occurred without the permission of the editors and the original CC-BY-SA license did not allow its distribution under the new terms.[10]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ ab'Language Indices - TV Tropes'. TV Tropes. Retrieved December 20, 2018.
- ^ ab'About Us'. TV Tropes. Archived from the original on April 21, 2016. Retrieved April 19, 2016.
- ^'tvtropes.org Site Info'. Alexa Internet. Archived from the original on September 7, 2017. Retrieved July 3, 2018.
- ^ ab'Administrivia: Welcome to TV Tropes'. TV Tropes. Archived from the original on May 7, 2014. Retrieved May 15, 2014. 'Your Rights (Legal Stuff)'
- ^ abCagle, Kurt (April 1, 2009). 'From Mary Sue to Magnificent Bastards: TV Tropes and Spontaneous Linked Data'. Semantic Universe. Archived from the original on November 3, 2014. Retrieved April 3, 2019.
- ^'The Current - TVTropes.org: Harnessing the might of the people to analyze fiction'. Thecurrentonline.com. Archived from the original on August 2, 2009. Retrieved May 18, 2010.
- ^Pincus-Roth, Zachary (February 28, 2010). 'TV Tropes identifies where you've seen it all before'. Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on March 3, 2010. Retrieved March 1, 2010.
- ^ ab'TV Tropes Home Page'. TVTropes.org. Archived from the original on April 22, 2008. Retrieved May 16, 2014.
- ^'TV Tropes Home Page'. TVTropes.org. Archived from the original on July 17, 2012. Retrieved September 3, 2015.
- ^ ab'TV Tropes Relicensed its Content - Without Permit'. Soylent News. May 15, 2014. Archived from the original on October 5, 2015. Retrieved September 3, 2015.
- ^https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/page_type_counts.php
- ^Newitz, Annalee (February 24, 2010). 'Behind The Wiki: Meet TV Tropes Cofounder Fast Eddie'. io9. Archived from the original on February 27, 2010. Retrieved February 25, 2010.
- ^'Big Things Happening on TV Tropes'. TV Tropes Forum.
- ^'Wikipedia - Television Tropes & Idioms'. TV Tropes. Archived from the original on October 25, 2011. Retrieved August 8, 2010.
- ^'There Is No Such Thing As Notability - TV Tropes'. TV Tropes. Archived from the original on July 12, 2012. Retrieved May 18, 2010.
- ^'Tropes - TV Tropes'. tvtropes.org. Retrieved March 1, 2018.
- ^'I Am Spartacus'. TV Tropes. Archived from the original on September 7, 2017. Retrieved September 7, 2017.
- ^'Your Mileage May Vary - Television Tropes & Idioms'. TV Tropes. Archived from the original on September 3, 2012. Retrieved August 21, 2012.
- ^'Jumping the Shark - TV Tropes'. tvtropes.org. Retrieved March 1, 2018.
- ^'Happy Days (Series) - TV Tropes'. tvtropes.org. Retrieved March 1, 2018.
- ^'Moment of Awesome / Sugar Wiki - TV Tropes'. tvtropes.org. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
- ^'Fridge Logic - TV Tropes'. tvtropes.org. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
- ^'Fridge Horror - TV Tropes'. tvtropes.org. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
- ^'Fridge Brilliance - TV Tropes'. tvtropes.org. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
- ^'Laconic Wiki - TV Tropes'. tvtropes.org. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
- ^'TLP Guidelines'. Archived from the original on October 3, 2017. Retrieved October 2, 2017.
- ^'TV Tropes Will Ruin Your Life'. Archived from the original on July 12, 2012. Retrieved March 2, 2014.
- ^'Echo Chamber'. Archived from the original on September 1, 2012.
- ^Bruce Sterling (January 21, 2009). 'TV Tropes, the all-devouring pop-culture wiki'. WIRED. Archived from the original on March 12, 2017. Retrieved March 11, 2017.
- ^Börzsei, Linda (April 2012). 'Literary Criticism in New Media'. Academia.edu. Archived from the original on July 11, 2015. Retrieved September 3, 2015.
- ^Kruger, Daniel; et al. (2006). 'Hierarchy in the Library: Egalitarian Dynamics in Victorian Novels'(PDF). Journal of Evolutionary Psychology. Archived(PDF) from the original on October 23, 2013. Retrieved November 1, 2013.
- ^Hanson, Robin (May 9, 2009). 'Tropes Are Treasures'. Overcoming Bias. Archived from the original on October 20, 2016. Retrieved March 11, 2017.
- ^Douglas, Nick (February 12, 2018). 'Use the TV Tropes Site the Same Way You Would Wikipedia'. Lifehacker. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
- ^ ab'Administrivia: The Google Incident'. TV Tropes. Archived from the original on May 16, 2014. Retrieved May 16, 2014.
- ^'Google Groups'. productforums.google.com. Retrieved October 6, 2016.
- ^Aja Romano (June 26, 2012). 'TV Tropes Deletes Every Rape Trope; Geek Feminism Wiki steps in'. themarysue.com. Archived from the original on April 23, 2014. Retrieved May 16, 2014.
- ^Alyssa Rosenberg (June 26, 2012). 'TV Tropes Bows to Google's Ad Servers, Deletes Discussions of Sexual Assault in Culture'. ThinkProgress. Archived from the original on May 17, 2014. Retrieved May 16, 2014.
- ^'TV Tropes Home Page'. Archived from the original on June 14, 2012.
- ^'TV Tropes Home Page'. Archived from the original on July 22, 2012.
- ^'The TV Tropes Foundation?'. TV Tropes. Archived from the original on May 6, 2014.
- ^'Line 244 Administrivia/WelcomeToTVTropes'. TV Tropes. Archived from the original on May 17, 2014. Retrieved May 15, 2014. 'By contributing content to this site, whether text or images, you grant TV Tropes irrevocable ownership of said content, with all rights surrendered [...] We are not required to attribute content you contribute to you, nor do you retain ownership of anything you contribute. Anything you contribute may be deleted, modified, or used commercially by us without notification or consent, to the extent permitted by applicable laws. For that reason, we strongly recommend that you do not post material on our site, whether in text or image form, that you wish to receive commercial benefit from in the future.'
- ^'History: Administrivia/WelcomeToTVTropes page history'. TV Tropes. Archived from the original on May 17, 2014. Retrieved May 15, 2014. 'Your Rights (Legal Stuff)'
- ^'Line 302 Administrivia/WelcomeToTVTropes'. TV Tropes. Archived from the original on April 12, 2015. Retrieved April 6, 2015. 'TV Tropes does not claim ownership to your copyrighted content or information you submit to us ('user content'). Instead, by submitting user content to TV Tropes, you grant us a royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive, unrestricted, worldwide license to use, copy, reproduce, process, adapt, modify, publish, prepare derivative works, distribute copies, perform, or publicly display your user content in any medium and for any purpose, including commercial purposes, and to authorize others to do so.'
- ^'Line 306 Administrivia/WelcomeToTVTropes'. TV Tropes. Archived from the original on April 12, 2015. Retrieved April 6, 2015. 'We are not required to attribute your user content to you. Anything you contribute may be deleted, modified, or used commercially by us without notification or consent, to the extent permitted by applicable laws. For that reason, we strongly recommend that you do not post material on our site for the first time, whether in text or image form, that you wish to receive publication credit for in the future.'
- ^'All The Tropes:Why Fork TV Tropes'. miraheze.org. Archived from the original on November 24, 2015.
External links[edit]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=TV_Tropes&oldid=902026055'
In literature, a trope is a common plot convention, element or theme as a use of figurative language, via word, phrase or an image, for artistic effect such as using a figure of speech.[1] The word trope has also come to be used for describing commonly recurring literary and rhetorical devices,[2]motifs or clichés in creative works.[3][4]
A trope can become a cliché if it's overused.
- 5References
Origins[edit]
The term trope derives from the Greek τρόπος (tropos), 'turn, direction, way', derived from the verb τρέπειν (trepein), 'to turn, to direct, to alter, to change'.[3] Tropes and their classification were an important field in classical rhetoric. The study of tropes has been taken up again in modern criticism, especially in deconstruction.[5] Tropological criticism (not to be confused with tropological reading, a type of biblical exegesis) is the historical study of tropes, which aims to 'define the dominant tropes of an epoch' and to 'find those tropes in literary and non-literary texts', an interdisciplinary investigation of which Michel Foucault was an 'important exemplar'.[5]
In medieval writing[edit]
A specialized use is the medieval amplification of texts from the liturgy, such as in the Kyrie Eleison (Kyrie, / magnae Deus potentia, / liberator hominis, / transgressoris mandati, / eleison). The most important example of such a trope is the Quem quaeritis?, an amplification before the Introit of the Easter Sunday service and the source for liturgical drama.[2][6] This particular practice came to an end with the Tridentine Mass, the unification of the liturgy in 1570 promulgated by Pope Pius V.[5]
Types and examples[edit]
Rhetoricians have closely analyzed the great variety of 'twists and turns' used in poetry and literature and have provided an extensive list of precise labels for these poetic devices. These include:
- Allegory – A sustained metaphor continued through whole sentences or even through a whole discourse. For example: 'The ship of state has sailed through rougher storms than the tempest of these lobbyists.'
- Antanaclasis – The stylistic trope of repeating a single word, but with a different meaning each time; antanaclasis is a common type of pun, and like other kinds of pun, it is often found in slogans.
- Hyperbole - the use of exaggeration to create a strong impression.
- Irony – Creating a trope through implying the opposite of the standard meaning, such as describing a bad situation as 'good times'.
- Metaphor – An explanation of an object or idea through juxtaposition of disparate things with a similar characteristic, such as describing a courageous person as having a 'heart of a lion'.
- Metonymy – A trope through proximity or correspondence. For example, referring to actions of the U.S. President as 'actions of the White House'.
- Synecdoche – Related to metonymy and metaphor, creates a play on words by referring to something with a related concept: for example, referring to the whole with the name of a part, such as 'hired hands' for workers; a part with the name of the whole, such as 'the law' for police officers; the general with the specific, such as 'bread' for food; the specific with the general, such as 'cat' for a lion; or an object with its substance, such as 'bricks and mortar' for a building.
- Catachresis – improper use of metaphor
For a longer list, see Figure of speech: Tropes.
Kenneth Burke has called metaphor, metonymy, synecdoche and irony the 'four master tropes'.[7]
Whilst most of the various forms of phrasing described above are in common usage, most of the terms themselves are not, in particular antanaclasis, litotes, metonymy, synecdoche and catachresis.[citation needed]
See also[edit]
Look up trope in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
- TV Tropes, a site dedicated to cataloguing and studying tropes in fiction
References[edit]
Citations[edit]
- ^Miller (1990). Tropes, Parables, and Performatives. Duke University Press. p. 9. ISBN978-0822311119.
- ^ abCuddon, J. A.; Preston, C. E. (1998). 'Trope'. The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory (4 ed.). London: Penguin. p. 948. ISBN9780140513639.
- ^ ab'trope', Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Massachusetts: Merriam-Webster, 2009, retrieved 2009-10-16
- ^'trope (revised entry)'. Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. 2014.
- ^ abcChilders, Joseph; Hentzi, Gary (1995). 'Trope'. The Columbia Dictionary of Modern Literary and Cultural Criticism. New York: Columbia UP. p. 309. ISBN9780231072434.
- ^Cuddon, J. A.; Preston, C. E. (1998). 'Quem quaeritis trope'. The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory (4 ed.). London: Penguin. p. 721. ISBN9780140513639.
- ^Burke, K. (1969). A grammar of motives. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Sources[edit]
- Baldrick, Chris. 2008. Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms. Oxford University Press. New York. ISBN978-0-19-920827-2
- Corbett, Edward P. J. and Connors, Robert J. 1999. Style and Statement. Oxford University Press. New York, Oxford. ISBN0-19-511543-0
- Kennedy, X.J. et al. 2006. The Longman Dictionary of Literary Terms: Vocabulary for the Informed Reader. Pearson, Longman. New York. ISBN0-321-33194-X
- Forsyth, Mark. 2014. The Elements of Eloquence. Berkley Publishing Group/Penguin Publishing. New York. ISBN978-0-425-27618-1
- Quinn, Edward. 1999. A Dictionary of Literary and Thematic Terms. Checkmark Books. New York. ISBN0-8160-4394-9
- 'Silva Rhetorica'. rhetoric.byu.edu.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trope_(literature)&oldid=900695016'