Age of Titles

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Common title convention. Somewhere in the title will be the words "age of (insert age here)". "The" is optional.

Why is this the case? it sounds cool. There is something intricately cool about the word "age" when applied to a concept other than "How old are you?" It's mysterious, giving things an overarching, supporting theme yet never revealing too much about the work itself. The "age" can tell audiences what sort of things they expect; audiences won't expect hypersonic radiological electromagnetic time travel in a work titled "Age of Pirates", yet "Age of Pirates" never tells audiences anything about the plot or characters. This is the perfect combination to get the everyone's imaginations starting. A title is the first thing someone will see for any work. Make the title count.

A subtrope of The X of Y.

Examples of Age of Titles include:

Comic Books

Literature

  • The Age of Innocence by Edith Warton.
  • The Age of Reason: Being an Investigation of True and Fabulous Theology by Thomas Paine.
  • The Age of American Unreason, by Susan Jacoby.
  • The books of James Lovegroves Pantheon series: The Age of Ra, The Age of Odin,' The Age of Zeus and The Age of Aztec.

Live Action TV

Music

Theatre

Video Games

Web Original

Real Life

  • Commonly used to describe time periods to emphasize certain elements of the time period. (Age of Sail, Age of discovery, etc.)

Other