Values Dissonance: Difference between revisions

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(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.ValuesDissonance 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.ValuesDissonance, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
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Other tropes find it difficult to age gracefully. The world being the dynamic and evolving place that it is, some aspects of the media don't quite manage to keep pace with the time, and become [[Discredited Trope|the "Grumpy Old Men" of Tropeland.]]
 
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]].
 
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.