Getting Crap Past the Radar/Literature: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
Examples of [[{{TOPLEVELPAGE}}]] in [[{{SUBPAGENAME}}]] include:
[[File:zeltrons_love_luke_814.jpg|frame| Strict No Gays policy? Huh?]]
 
== Subpages ==
* ''[[Goosebumps/Radar|Goosebumps]]''
* ''[[Harry Potter (novel)/Radar|Harry Potter]]''
 
== Books ++==
* The most noted example might be ''[[Animal Farm]].'' Designed to be a criticism of Communism, it had great difficulty finding a publisher, largely because of fears it would undermine the [[World War II]] alliance between the US, UK, and Soviet Union. If it had been written "straight," it might not have been published; as an allegory about farm animals, it could slide by.
* ''[[Where's Waldo]]?'': Cartoonist Martin Handford hid his titular hero amongst massive (sometimes absurdly so) crowd scenes in which so many unusual events were taking place that you had to look carefully to make out the guy in the striped shirt and ski cap (which was the point of the book). Many of the events depicted were ridiculous or bizarre, and several of them were controversial inclusions for a book aimed at kids ages 6 to 14: [[The Nudifier|a vacuum cleaner sucking a woman's dress off of her body]], [[Vomit Indiscretion Shot|a man graphically vomiting]], and [[Groin Attack|another guy getting accidentally hit in the nuts]]. One of these sneaky scenes was so subtle that you might not even notice it: a boy at the beach teases a bikini-clad beauty by placing the cold end of his ice cream cone on her back, causing her to bolt up from a prone to a semi-prone position; unless you're looking closely, you might not notice that the girl has loosened her bikini top so as not to get tan lines while sunbathing, and she's about to expose her bare breasts to the world.
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*** Well, that and the strong implication in both novel and 1941 film that Peter Lorre's character Joel Cairo and the "gunsel," Wilmer, are having a homosexual affair. Also this line from the novel, about the gunsel: "The boy spoke two words, the first [[Narrative Profanity Filter|a short guttural verb]], the second 'you.'"
** Not literature, but relevant: [[Deadpool]] refers to himself as a "gunsel" multiple times in Joe Kelly's run--probably intentionally, and quite likely referencing this incident.
* [[Discworld|Terry Pratchett]] engages in this frequently but normally it's not so jarring as they are adult books. But there was a notable occurrence in ''[[Discworld/The Wee Free Men|The Wee Free Men]]'', which is definitely a kids' book.
{{quote|'''The Toad:''' Oh, ''croap''!
'''Tiffany''': Pardon?
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** Also later in the book the Toad says "shoap". And the Nac Mac Feegle's favourite: "Crivens!" As well as their "Pisht", which one of Tiffany's more "proper" witch teachers is ''assured'' means "tired".
*** That's possibly a play on "tired and emotional", libel-dodging [[Common Newspaper Words|journalese]] used (especially by ''[[Private Eye]]'') for someone, usually a politician or celebrity, being drunk in public. This happens to Hacker in one episode of ''[[Yes Minister]]''.
** There's at least one instance of literal crap.: in ''[[Men at Arms]]'' Detritus the troll (who are made out of stone) uses "coprolith" (fossilised turd) instead.
*** And in the same book, Detritus also gives us "In Anhk-Morpork even der ''shit'' gets a street to itself. Truly dis is a land of opportunity."
** There's also Lance-Constable Sally Von Humpeding's real name -- aside from the "von ''Humpeding''" in the first place, her first name is ''"Salacia"''. There is ''no possible way'' that wasn't deliberate.
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*** In the previous book, Hera refers to Percy as "one of Posideon's... [[Last-Second Word Swap|children]]". Percy comments that it's pretty obvious she had a different word in mind.
* In [[The Golden Dream of Carlo Chuchio]] there is a surprisingly realistic description of human trafficking without ''quite'' describing what was [[I Have You Now, My Pretty|intended for the heroine]].
 
== Short Stories ==
* The Mark Twain story "The Story of Grandfather's Old Ram" features a narrator who gets so sidetracked he falls asleep before finishing his story. That's fortunate, because the story appears to be about how his grandfather was [[Unusual Euphemism|given the gift of]] [[Nightmare Fuel|unexpected sex]] when he bent down to pick up a coin.
 
== Print Media ==