Values Dissonance: Difference between revisions

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Very often, the trope in question is [[An Aesop]], and exporting it, or viewing it twenty years later than the time it was created, results in a transformation into a [[Family-Unfriendly Aesop]].
 
See also [[Unfortunate Implications]]. Compare [[Moral Dissonance]], where the show breaks its own morals. Also see [[Germans Love David Hasselhoff]], in which it's critical acclaim rather than moral values that is on the line. Also see [[Fair for Its Day]], in which the work actually has ''less'' values dissonance than its contemporaries. See [[Culture Clash]] and [[Innocent Bigot]] for when this happens in-story and [[Deliberate Values Dissonance]] for when the author is doing it on purpose. Also see [[Have a Gay Old Time]] and [[Get Thee to a Nunnery]], where dialogue is interpreted differently due to this. Has similarity to [[Good Flaws, Bad Flaws]]. Contrast [[Blue and Orange Morality]] and [[Values Resonance]]. Can sometimes result in [[Misplaced Nationalism]]. Compare [[Lost in Translation]], which is like Values Dissonance except much less ethically/morally oriented.
 
An example of [[Values Dissonance]] between the United Kingdom and the US would be the use of blackface imagery, which formed the centrepiece of the [[BBC]]'s ''[[Black-and-White Minstrel Show]]'' until the 1970s. Blackface was/is also used in other countries, such as Japan, The Netherlands, and Australia, where it does not have the same cultural stigma.