Point of Divergence: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
No edit summary
(Unicorn in the garden rule; this is a trope)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{trope|wppage=Chintzware}}
{{work}}
A point of divergence is a specific event in an [[Alternate Universe|alternate history]] story that occurs differently than it did in factual history. Most alternate history authors will change a single event, creating a "ripple effect", however, the point of divergence may range in importance and realism from a character dropping or not dropping a piece of paper at a crucial time, to time travel and alien invasion (such as Harry Turtledove's "Balance" series, when World War Two is interrupted by a fleet of lizard-people from outer space).
A point of divergence is a specific event in an [[Alternate Universe|alternate history]] story that occurs differently than it did in factual history. Most alternate history authors will change a single event, creating a "ripple effect" that sets up the scenario. This divergence, which acts as the story's [[The "Unicorn In The Garden" Rule|"unicorn in the garden"]] or [[Mohs Scale of Science Fiction Hardness/One Big Lie|"one big lie"]], may range in importance and realism from a character dropping or not dropping a piece of paper at a crucial time, to time travel and alien invasion (such as Harry Turtledove's "Balance" series, when World War Two is interrupted by a fleet of lizard-people from outer space).


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 16:48, 4 May 2016

A point of divergence is a specific event in an alternate history story that occurs differently than it did in factual history. Most alternate history authors will change a single event, creating a "ripple effect" that sets up the scenario. This divergence, which acts as the story's "unicorn in the garden" or "one big lie", may range in importance and realism from a character dropping or not dropping a piece of paper at a crucial time, to time travel and alien invasion (such as Harry Turtledove's "Balance" series, when World War Two is interrupted by a fleet of lizard-people from outer space).