Difference between revisions of "High Fantasy"

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'''''High fantasy''''', also called '''''[[epic]] fantasy''''', is a sub-genre of [[fantasy]], defined either by its setting in an imaginary world or by the epic stature of its characters and plot.   
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'''''High fantasy''''', also called '''''epic fantasy''''' (and, derisively, '''elfy-welfy fantasy'''), is a sub-genre of [[fantasy]], defined either by its setting in an imaginary world or by the [[epic]] stature of its characters and plot.   
  
 
[[Marshall Tymn]], [[Kenneth Zahorski]] and [[Robert H. Boyer]] distinguished between high fantasy, set in a fully realized secondary world, and '''''low fantasy''''', which features supernatural intrusions into our own world.
 
[[Marshall Tymn]], [[Kenneth Zahorski]] and [[Robert H. Boyer]] distinguished between high fantasy, set in a fully realized secondary world, and '''''low fantasy''''', which features supernatural intrusions into our own world.

Revision as of 02:46, 12 June 2021

High fantasy, also called epic fantasy (and, derisively, elfy-welfy fantasy), is a sub-genre of fantasy, defined either by its setting in an imaginary world or by the epic stature of its characters and plot.

Marshall Tymn, Kenneth Zahorski and Robert H. Boyer distinguished between high fantasy, set in a fully realized secondary world, and low fantasy, which features supernatural intrusions into our own world.

Quintessential works of high fantasy, such as J. R. R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings and Robert Jordan’s The Wheel of Time, are epics set in fully-realized worlds.

See also: Fantasy, Heroic Fantasy, Classification of Fantasy, Tolkien Imitators.



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