Cyclic Trope: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Remember, [[Examples Are Not Recent]].
Remember, [[Examples Are Not Recent]].
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=== Some [[Trope|tropes]] that are cyclic: ===
{{tropelist|Some [[Trope|tropes]] that are cyclic:}}

* [[3D Movie]]: Started out as "the next big thing", then thrown aside and treated with disdain. Now, it's "the next big thing". This has already happened twice before (first in the [[The Fifties|1950s]] and then again in the [[The Eighties|1980s]]), as each time the [[Technology Marches On]] it's revived, gets a couple of years in the spotlight, and then everybody decides it's still not worth the trouble. It seems to have repeated again, with 3D technology becoming less frequent in movies (though the fact that very popular and non-gimmicky movies like ''[[Avatar (film)|Avatar]]'' and ''[[Toy Story 3]]'' have used it and drawn in more ticket sales as a result means that the trend probably won't disappear ''entirely'').
* [[3D Movie]]: Started out as "the next big thing", then thrown aside and treated with disdain. Now, it's "the next big thing". This has already happened twice before (first in the [[The Fifties|1950s]] and then again in the [[The Eighties|1980s]]), as each time the [[Technology Marches On]] it's revived, gets a couple of years in the spotlight, and then everybody decides it's still not worth the trouble. It seems to have repeated again, with 3D technology becoming less frequent in movies (though the fact that very popular and non-gimmicky movies like ''[[Avatar (film)|Avatar]]'' and ''[[Toy Story 3]]'' have used it and drawn in more ticket sales as a result means that the trend probably won't disappear ''entirely'').
* [[Action Girl]] (status/appeal cycles between [[Hot Amazon]] and [[No Guy Wants an Amazon]])
* [[Action Girl]] (status/appeal cycles between [[Hot Amazon]] and [[No Guy Wants an Amazon]])

Revision as of 02:13, 22 July 2014

This is a Trope that goes through a circular pattern of change, eventually returning to its original form after several iterations.

Like this: "Fat Guys Are Jolly" gets subverted over time to "Fat Guys Are Kinda Sad And Pitiful". After a while at that value, the audience is expecting "sympathetic" Fat Guys, so it gets subverted to "Fat Guys Are Mean And Greedy". Once expectations are out there for evil Fat Guys, it gets subverted back to "Fat Guys Are Jolly".

Most cycles are bipolar, though, oscillating back and forth between two opposites that mutually subvert (or invert) each other.

See also Fleeting Demographic Rule, Popularity Polynomial. Compare and contrast with Undead Horse Trope, Evolving Trope.

Remember, Examples Are Not Recent.


Some tropes that are cyclic: