Jamber
Sage
Do you call something 'fantasy' if it's largely contemporary realism but with one or two small elements changed, giving it a slightly surrealistic feel?
I'm definitely not writing surrealism, but I'm working on a margin here. Just wondering what to call it. (Or is it just 'strange'? No; it's not different enough for that.)
Setting is a hospital and surrounds deliberately blending 1940s and 1970s elements (clothing and sexual morality are wartime, but there are 1970s music and art, and traces of 1960s social disruption); main characters are a nurse, a hapless bandage-covered patient and a slightly mad doctor. It's a lot like a dream, but there's a strong core narrative leading to an ending in which
things explode and... well, I guess it becomes slightly futuristic.
Do you think there might be a label for this kind of thing in fantasy genre terms? Something-punk? Oh hang on, what about 'realism-punk'? Or 'history-punk'? No; it's madder than that.
Any ideas gratefully received.
Jennie
I'm definitely not writing surrealism, but I'm working on a margin here. Just wondering what to call it. (Or is it just 'strange'? No; it's not different enough for that.)
Setting is a hospital and surrounds deliberately blending 1940s and 1970s elements (clothing and sexual morality are wartime, but there are 1970s music and art, and traces of 1960s social disruption); main characters are a nurse, a hapless bandage-covered patient and a slightly mad doctor. It's a lot like a dream, but there's a strong core narrative leading to an ending in which
things explode and... well, I guess it becomes slightly futuristic.
Do you think there might be a label for this kind of thing in fantasy genre terms? Something-punk? Oh hang on, what about 'realism-punk'? Or 'history-punk'? No; it's madder than that.
Any ideas gratefully received.
Jennie

Auror