Author Phobia: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (→‎Literature: clean up, replaced: [[The Hobbit| → [[The Hobbit (novel)|)
Line 18: Line 18:


== Literature ==
== Literature ==
* [[J. R. R. Tolkien|JRR Tolkien]] was bitten by a poisonous spider in his youth in South Africa and narrowly escaped death. [[Creator Thumbprint|Many of his works]] feature [[Giant Spider|giant, malevolent arachnids]], including [[The Hobbit|the spiders of Mirkwood]], [[The Lord of the Rings|Shelob]], and [[The Silmarillion|Ungoliant]].
* [[J. R. R. Tolkien|JRR Tolkien]] was bitten by a poisonous spider in his youth in South Africa and narrowly escaped death. [[Creator Thumbprint|Many of his works]] feature [[Giant Spider|giant, malevolent arachnids]], including [[The Hobbit (novel)|the spiders of Mirkwood]], [[The Lord of the Rings|Shelob]], and [[The Silmarillion|Ungoliant]].
* Much of what [[H.P. Lovecraft|HP Lovecraft]] wrote was motivated by his own nightmares and personal phobias. Among the ones less likely to evoke similar feelings in readers nowadays were his fears of [[Values Dissonance|non-white Anglo-Saxon people and miscegenation]]. [[Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking|And fish]]. He also had a lifelong fear of cold temperatures, encouraged by his [[Ill Boy|frail constitution]]. This is partly why the oppressive atmosphere of ''[[At the Mountains of Madness]]'' is so effective.
* Much of what [[H.P. Lovecraft|HP Lovecraft]] wrote was motivated by his own nightmares and personal phobias. Among the ones less likely to evoke similar feelings in readers nowadays were his fears of [[Values Dissonance|non-white Anglo-Saxon people and miscegenation]]. [[Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking|And fish]]. He also had a lifelong fear of cold temperatures, encouraged by his [[Ill Boy|frail constitution]]. This is partly why the oppressive atmosphere of ''[[At the Mountains of Madness]]'' is so effective.
* [[Stephen King]] is known for writing about things that scare him personally.
* [[Stephen King]] is known for writing about things that scare him personally.

Revision as of 13:55, 24 October 2016

Authors are people just like us, with likes and dislikes... and fears. Sometimes a creator draws upon their personal Nightmare Fuel in an attempt to make their villains more fearsome and intimidating. For instance, if the author as a child was bitten by a venomous spider and nearly died, as JRR Tolkien was, they might make the Big Bad of their story a hideous Giant Spider.

Contrast Author Appeal.

Examples of Author Phobia include:


Anime and Manga

Film

  • Peter Jackson actually used his own phobia of spiders to measure the effectiveness of Shelob's design and animations for the Lord of the Rings films.
  • James Cameron wrote The Terminator based on a nightmare he had of a robot emerging from a fiery explosion and coming after him. It's even referenced on the main Nightmare Fuel page quote. "From the director's nightmares to yours." However, Cameron was sued because the idea bore a resemblance to two Harlan Ellison-written The Outer Limits episodes, "Soldier" and "Demon with a Glass Hand". As part of the settlement, the credits of the movie now include the phrase "Acknowledgement to the works of Harlan Ellison."
  • H. R. Giger is known to have incorporated his nightmares into his creations. Apparently, he often worked through his sleeplessness.
  • Alfred Hitchcock had a fear of the police, thanks to an incident in his childhood where his father ordered a policeman to lock him up for ten minutes for being disobedient. As a result, Police Are Useless and Wrongly Accused were two of his favorite tropes.
  • Mel Gibson's films are heavily criticized in England and elsewhere for perceived Anglophobia - for instance, the historical villain upgrades given to Banastre Tarleton in The Patriot and Edward I in Braveheart (his record is far more mixed than Gibson suggests). Then there is his butchery of Gallipoli in the film of the same name, specifically the idea that the British drank tea on the beach whilst the Australians died for them. We will not mention his treatment of another group in another film...
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street: Wes Craven named Fred Krueger after a bully who harassed him and based his appearance on a disfigured hobo who scared him as a child.

Literature

Video Games

Webcomics