Fantastic
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- :''For the song of Japanese singer Ami Suzuki, see Fantastic (song)
There is no truly typical "fantastic story", as the term generally discusses works of the horror or gothic genre. Some representative stories of this idea, however, are Algernon Blackwood's story "The Willows", where two men travelling down the Danube River are beset by an eery feeling of malice and several improbable setbacks in their trip. The question that pervades the story is whether they are falling prey to the wilderness and their own imaginations, or if there really is something horrific out to get them. Another more common example would be Edgar Allan Poe's story "The Black Cat", where a murderer is haunted by a black cat. Yet is the cat a revenge tactic from beyond the grave, or just a cat.
There isn't a clear distinction between the Fantastic and Magical Realism, but the latter seems generally to include a higher proportion of non-real elements.
The Fantastic is sometimes erroneously called the Grotesque or Supernatural fiction, because both the Grotesque and the Supernatural contain fantastic elements, yet they are not the same, as the fantastic is based on an ambiguity of those elements.
Examples of writers of Fantastic literature include:
- many of Edgar Allan Poe's short works
- Nikolai Gogol's "The Nose"
- Mikhail Bulgakov
- Algernon Blackwood's works
- Sheridan Le Fanu's works in "In a Glass Darkly"
- Mervyn Peake's Gormenghast series
- E.T.A. Hoffmann's works, notably Der Sandmann, "The Golden Flower Pot", and "The Nutcracker and the King of Mice"
- Gerard de Nerval's "Aurelia"
- Miracle on 34th Street, a film in which a man is likely to actually be Santa Claus (which would be supernatural) but that fact is never made certain.
- K-PAX, a film and a novel where a man claims to be an alien, but, again, that fact is never certain. (It is however made clear in the novel sequels to K-PAX whether or not the character is an alien.)
In Elizabethan slang, a Fantastic was a rake; an "effeminate fool" or "improvident young gallant". The character Lucio in Shakespeare's Measure for Measure is described in the Dramatis Personae as a Fantastic.
See also
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