Difference between revisions of "Lost World"

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(Created page with "A subgenre of fantasy and science fiction involving an undiscovered human civilization in a remote and exotic locale on Earth. Typically, these are adventure tales in...")
 
 
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A subgenre of [[fantasy]] and [[science fiction]] involving an undiscovered human civilization in a remote and exotic locale on Earth. Typically, these are adventure tales in which voyager from the Western world comes across the hidden community, whether by chance or on purpose.  The denizens may be mystical or possessed of unknown technology.  
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A subgenre of [[fantasy]] and [[science fiction]] involving an undiscovered human civilization in a remote and exotic locale on Earth. Typically, these are adventure tales in which a voyager from the Western world comes across the hidden community, whether by chance or on purpose.  The denizens may be mystical or possessed of unknown technology.  
  
[[Edgar Rice Burroughs]] and [[H. Rider Haggard]] were early champions of the style in the 19th century. It had pretty well died out by the 1950s, with a few outliers, mainly in cinema.  
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[[Edgar Rice Burroughs]] and [[H. Rider Haggard]] were early champions of the style in the 19th century. The most famous work in the genre is probably ''The Lost World'' (1912) by [[Arthur Conan Doyle]], an adventure story about the discovery of prehistoric creatures surviving in South America. The topos had pretty well died out by the 1950s, with a few outliers, mainly in [[movie|cinema]].  
  
 
{{SFE|name=lost_worlds}}.  
 
{{SFE|name=lost_worlds}}.  

Latest revision as of 06:03, 31 October 2022

A subgenre of fantasy and science fiction involving an undiscovered human civilization in a remote and exotic locale on Earth. Typically, these are adventure tales in which a voyager from the Western world comes across the hidden community, whether by chance or on purpose. The denizens may be mystical or possessed of unknown technology.

Edgar Rice Burroughs and H. Rider Haggard were early champions of the style in the 19th century. The most famous work in the genre is probably The Lost World (1912) by Arthur Conan Doyle, an adventure story about the discovery of prehistoric creatures surviving in South America. The topos had pretty well died out by the 1950s, with a few outliers, mainly in cinema.

Entry in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction.



Fiction 1870s1950s
This is a fiction page, describing fictional ideas and characters