Mythpunk



"Sei had never been comfortable in the presence of books. Their natural state was to be shut, closed, to grin pagily from shelves, laughing at her, promising so much and delivering such meanness, such thinness. They displayed only men and women with dead eyes and rituals of living she could not understand. When closed, books gave impressions of perfection. They did not need her."

- Cathrynne M. Valente, Palimpsest

"We raise and raze our city like the strangest house of cards..."

- S.J. Tucker, "We are Shangri-La"

Mythpunk refers to "a subgenre of mythic fiction" in which classical folklore and faerie tales get hyperpoetic postmodern makeovers. Coined by author Catherynne M Valente, the term describes a brand of speculative fiction which starts in folklore and myth and adds elements of postmodern fantastic techniques: urban fantasy, confessional poetry, non-linear storytelling, linguistic calisthenics, worldbuilding, and academic fantasy.

Characterized by baroque multicultural fashion, alternative/ queer sexuality, bizarre retellings of familiar faerie tales, pervasive anxiety, fear of inevitable change, elaborate symbolism and radical reinterpretation, mythpunk is a cross-media movement. Although largely defined through literary works like Andrea Jones's Hook & Jill, Francesca Lia Block's Weetzie Bat series and Catherynne Valente's The Orphans Tales, the mythpunk aesthetic occasionally manifests in music (The Decemberists), film (Pan's Labyrinth), jewelry and other media forms.

Although this (sub)genre shares many elements with Urban Fantasy, mythpunk stories tend to avoid linear or obvious story structures, simple prose and easily-discernible character archetypes. You may find talking dance shoes or carnivorous zebra-satyrs in a mythpunk tale, but lovesick vampires are right out!

(The name "mythpunk" also refers to a fiction blog; see below for details.)

Tropes:


 * Adaptation Expansion: Common in such stores.
 * Arabian Nights Days: Middle-Eastern influences (or outright) hommage is common.
 * Breaking the Fourth Wall: Common in narrative, not as much among characters.
 * Dark Is Not Evil: Monsters are often genteel, even heroic, and almost always misunderstood... yet still monsters.
 * also humans could be the real monsters
 * Cloudcuckoolander: Many mythpunk characters are decidedly, often wonderfully and occasionally frighteningly eccentric.
 * Cryptic Conversation: Characters often speak in riddles, stories or baroque metaphors, often to the annoyance of other characters.
 * Deconstruction: Almost a foundation for this genre.
 * Down the Rabbit Hole: Sometimes used to link the setting with the "real world".
 * Everyone Is Bi: Sexuality and gender are often rather... um, fluid.
 * Fairy Tale: The foundation for this genre.
 * Framing Device: Many mythpunk stories involve tales-within-tales.
 * Grimmification: Especially notable in Block's works, but typical overall.
 * Lyrical Dissonance: Beauty and misery are close companions in this genre.
 * Mind Screw: Almost by default, this genre presents almost everything in surreal terms, sometimes to excess.
 * Metaphorgotten: The genre's "linguistic calisthenics" can occasionally get rather thick.
 * Nightmare Fuel: Disturbing, even horrific, imagery is a hallmark of these tales.
 * Our Fairies Are Different: Mythpunk authors hew closer to The Fair Folk than to Disneyfied pixies.
 * Our Monsters Are Different: A staple of Valente's work.
 * Purple Prose: Often on the borderline and occasionally over the edge.
 * Steampunk: Often overlaps with mythpunk, especially in its Victorianna trappings.
 * Talking Animal: As in traditional folklore, mythpunk animals are quite chatty.
 * This Is Your Premise On Drugs: The "punk" element of mythpunk often comes from the rampant symbolism and surreal atmosphere.
 * Twice Told Tales: Many mythpunk stories have origins in older tales.
 * Urban Fantasy: Usually the starting-point of an adventure that gets stranger as it goes along.
 * Deliberate Values Dissonance: Faerieland often isn't a nice place to be...
 * World Building: Mythpunk stories often feature polycultural stews of elaborate degree.

Literature

 * Most of the elements involved in this genre can be found in the writings of Angela Carter, most obviously The Bloody Chamber, Nights At the Circus, and The Infernal Desire Machines of Doctor Hoffman.
 * Andrea Jones's novel Hook & Jill features a poetically perverse Coming of Age tale. In it, Wendy Darling starts growing up and wanting someone a bit more... serious... than an increasingly callous Peter Pan...
 * Gerald Brom's novel The Child Thief is a nightmarish take on Peter Pan. It begins with a kid running from drug dealers and just gets progressively weirder from there. And for extra spice, it adds zombies, too!
 * Valente's The Orphans Tales features most of the tropes above, wrapped in a Recursive Narrative drawn heavily from Arabian, Danish and Russian fairy tales. Plus pirates!
 * Sei's saga in Palimpsest features some amazing visions of locomotive mythology.
 * November's saga = Brrrrrrr..." or perhaps that should be Buzzzzzzz...''
 * Francesca Lia Block's novels and short stories practically vibrate with this style, most especially those in her Primavera series and the collection The Rose and the Beast.
 * The Jabberwocky series of anthologies published by Prime Books

Western Comics

 * An apparent progenitor of this subgenre can be found in Neil Gaiman's Sandman series, especially the "Season of Mists" story arc and the tales "Ramadan" and "Dream of 1000 Cats."
 * Alan Moore's series Promethea is mythpunk from end to end.
 * Hellboy has shades of this, combining fictional cosmic horrors with real-world mythological figures like Baba Yaga and Hecate.

Music

 * The Decemberists 2009 release The Hazards of Love - a concept album based around the tale of a woman, her shape-changer lover, and his Forest Queen mother - is the epitome of this genre in action.
 * Indie musician S.J. Tucker S.J. Tucker has released, as of 2010, three albums based on Valente's work, toured with her to support Palimpsest, and sometimes performs in costume as characters from Valente's work. The first two albums in this series - For the Girl in the Garden and Solace and Sorrow are based upon the first two Orphan's Tales novels; the third, Quartered, is based on Palimpsest.
 * With the 2009 album :ankoko butoh:, the band Faith and the Muse moved from its original Gothic Rock sound to a more mythpunk aesthetic, including elaborate visuals, dancers, Asian cultural elements, and baroque theatrics.

Film

 * Tim Burton's 2010 version of Alice in Wonderland treads this territory with gusto.
 * Of course, it can be argued that the original Alice in Wonderland was mythpunk in creepy training pants...
 * It can also be argued that neither one of them are, since they don't use "elements of postmodern fantastic techniques". Although you could consider the 1800's-parts of the story from the perspective of the main character, it still follows traditional fantasy.
 * Although the film predates the term, the 1980 film Company of Wolves displays this genre in all its best and most excessive elements.
 * Mirror Mask. Totally... although it displays a bit more levity than many stories in this style.
 * Americans thought that ~Pan's Labyrinth~ (El Labertino del Fauno) was a nice little fairy tale. The "R" rating should have clued them in...

Live Action TV

 * Doctor Who has some examples. Most of them predate the term mythpunk.
 * The Curse of Peladon and The Monster of Peladon both take place on a Federation planet with Roman and Medieval elements, and a castle with a king or queen. One of the characters in the second story is a satyr for no particular reason.
 * The Androids of Tara is a futuristic retelling of The Prisoner of Zenda with electric flashing swords! Also includes castles, kings and robots!
 * The Myth Makers takes place in Troy.
 * The Underwater Menace has The Doctor and his companions taken prisoner by the survivors of Atlantis.
 * The Mind Robber takes place in The Land of Fiction.
 * The Deadly Assassin, The Invasion of Time, and particularly The Five Doctors portray the Time Lords in a slightly Romanesque culture.
 * Battlefield is a sequel to the King Arthur legend.
 * The Fires of Pompeii
 * The Pandorica Opens and The Big Bang

Webcomics

 * The writer of the webcomic Digger, Ursula Vernon, obviously knows a LOT about comparative mythology, much of it apparently gained from doing research for a degree in anthropology, as shown by the story's mix of a variety of mostly Asian sources, but including influences from around the world,including in one memorable case a modification of a myth told by the children of Cuban refugees in Miami, as well as some Vernon made up on her own.

Real Life

 * As a promotional tour for her novel Palimpsest, Catherynne M. Valente toured several cities by train (mirroring the locomotive and city themes throughout the book). During that tour, Valente, her fans and various collaborators staged readings, shows and musical performances, often in costume.
 * Fans and performers were often painted with "tattoos" that recalled the mystical map-tattoos that appear on people who have been to Palimpsest. Several of them have gone on to make those tattoos permanent.
 * The Ajanabah setting from the Orphan's Tales series has been spun off into artwork, jewelry, fire-spinning shows, costumes, and several albums.

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Mythpunk Fiction Blog
The name Mythpunk also refers to a fiction blog containing action-comedy stories combining alternate history and epics. Set in a world where historical figures regularly clash with dinosaurs, zombies, and alien gods with kung fu, the stories run off of Rule of Cool and sly historical and pop culture in-jokes.

Tropes:


 * Authority Equals Asskicking: In full effect for the Founding Fathers.
 * Badass Boast: Alexander Hamilton has one of these.
 * Badass Normal: Pretty much every historical figure, ever.
 * Buddhism: With Jane Austen as Siddhartha.
 * Cosmic Horror Story: Radio Gaga.
 * Crowning Moment of Funny: "The British were fielding velociraptors. A full legion of them, clad in red coats and powdered wigs, advanced on the colonial army, reptilian eyes aglint with the cold malice of primeval hunger."
 * Deal With the Devil: George Washington made a pact with the gods of firearms to become impervious to bullets.
 * Doomsday Device: Benjamin Franklin built one of these.
 * Eldritch Abomination: Lady Gaga.
 * The Empire: The British, naturally.
 * Everything's Better With Dinosaurs: Washington Invictus.
 * Eye Beams: Jane Austen's demon governess has these.
 * Fantasy Kitchen Sink: Gods, zombies, vampires, Buddhas, Lovecraftian horrors, mad scientists, dinosaurs, and presidents.
 * George Washington: Is a total badass.
 * Immune to Bullets: George Washington.
 * Katanas Are Just Better: Alexander Hamilton uses a katana forged by Adam Smith to defeat the god of economics.
 * Mad Scientist: Benjamin Franklin is one of these.
 * Martial Arts and Crafts: Alexander Hamilton is a master of kung fu economomics.
 * Metaphysical Fuel: Washington powers Benjamin Franklin's superweapon with the crystallized soul of Benedict Arnold.
 * Mind Rape: Lady Gaga does this.
 * Our Vampires Are Different: They're manifestations of the inherent suffering of all life. Or at least, Dracula is.
 * Rule of Cool: The driving force of the stories.
 * Science Is Bad: Benjamin Franklin is seen as a villainous figure because he's a scientist. On the other hand, Thomas Jefferson is a sorcerer and George Washington makes deals with various devils, and nothing is said of it.
 * Somewhere a Palaeontologist Is Crying: Carefully danced around. While velociraptors appear, it's never mentioned whether they're realistically tiny, or the large-sized, Jurassic Park-style velociraptors.
 * And beside that, they were created through Mad Science.
 * Zombie Apocalypse: Anyone Died is one of these, and a Victorian-era zombie apocalypse is a minor detail in Virtue and Vampyrism.