Pop culture fiction explained

Pop culture fiction is a genre of fiction where stories are written intentionally to be filled with references from other works and media.[1] [2] Stories in this genre are focused solely on using popular culture references.

Criteria

Some works in the genre use pop culture references to elicit nostalgia among its consumers, while other examples have the whole setting and universe themselves built upon and revolves around pop cultural references.[2] [3] Pop culture fiction doesn't just reference one or two titles, but works under this genre reference several titles across different genres and media.[4]

Many types of postmodern works and modern-day homage, metafiction, satires and parodies fall under this category.[2] [5] But unlike more typically comedic satires and parodies, pop culture fiction contains depth, complexities and serious themes, with many even garnering critical acclaim.[6] [7] Many such stories have also been inspired by video games, horror, and geek culture.[8] [9]

Examples

Notable pop culture fiction books

List of pop culture fiction in comic format

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Should Fiction Be Timeless? Pop Culture References in Contemporary Novels. Electric Lit. Pickard, Kevin. 19 January 2016 . (NOTE: The term used for the genre in the article is "Pop-Culture-Referencing Fiction")
  2. Kidd, Dustin. Pop Culture Freaks: Identity, Mass Media, and Society. Routledge; 2nd Edition (Updated: August 2020). pp. 143–145. . Excerpt
  3. Alexander, Jonathan. The Uses and Abuses of Pop Culture in Ready Player One and Grandmother's Gold (July 7, 2020)
  4. Web site: Poland as Gilead. Pop culture fiction and performative protests in the era of the pandemic. Sage Journals. Żukiewicz, Przemysław . 8 June 2023.
  5. Web site: Pop Culture in Literature: Styles, Themes, and Genres. New York University. Sweden, Stephen R.. 12 November 2022.
  6. Web site: A Guide to Writing Pop Culture Fiction. Literary Hub. Renault, Henry Percy. 15 October 2022 .
  7. Web site: Pop Culture (Encyclopedia of Aesthetics 2nd Edition). Oxford University Press. Kelly, Michael. 10 February 2021.
  8. Stein, Daniel. From Comic Strips to Graphic Novels: Contributions to the Theory and History of Graphic Narrative (Narratologia, 37). De Gruyter; 1st edition (June 18, 2013). ISBN 978-3110281811. p. 286-287
  9. Maberry, Jonathan. They Bite: Endless Cravings of Supernatural Predators. Citadel (August 31, 2021). ISBN 978-0806541433. p. 54, 78