What is post post-apocalyptic?

Any fantasy story with “ancient advanced civilization that was wiped out by some event” can be considered post-post-apocalypse.

What is a post-apocalyptic story?

What is apocalyptic or post-apocalyptic fiction? This refers to stories that deal with the aftermath of a catastrophic event that devastates humanity. The catastrophe can be manmade, such as a nuclear war, or a natural disaster such as an asteroid hitting the Earth or a new plague.

What are the origins of post-apocalyptic fiction?

In the twentieth century, the apocalyptic genre grew in the wake of World War I, World War II, and the Cold War nuclear arms race. Novelists, essayists, and filmmakers conjured many an apocalyptic world that offered everything from zombie wars to a desolate post-nuclear wastelands.

Why is post-apocalyptic fiction popular?

Post-apocalyptic books are thriving for a simple reason: The world feels more precariously perched on the lip of the abyss than ever, and facing those fears through fiction helps us deal with it. These stories are cathartic as well as cautionary.

What makes a good post-apocalyptic story?

Having clear cut characters makes the story much smoother and allows for their individuality to shine. Especially in a post-apocalyptic story, where often the conflict is how a character or a group of characters react to the world around them (which in most cases has a character all its own).

What was the first post-apocalyptic book?

Today, most literary historians point to Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley as one of the first — if not the first — authors to write a work of post-apocalyptic fiction. The novel is called The Last Man, and you can read it for free through Project Gutenberg, Google Books, and other sources.

Who invented post-apocalyptic?

Today, most literary historians point to Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley as one of the first — if not the first — authors to write a work of post-apocalyptic fiction.

When did post-apocalyptic fiction become popular?

The genre gained popularity after World War II, when the possibility of global annihilation by nuclear weapons entered the public consciousness. However, recognizable apocalyptic novels had existed since the first quarter of the 19th century, when Mary Shelley’s The Last Man was published.

Why do we like post apocalyptic?

It’s painful and slow or quixotic at best. End-of-the-world narratives allow us to imagine large scale rebirth and play into our utopian desires. The apocalypse, then, is not about the end. It’s not about those millions of deaths, but about the rebirth that comes afterward.

What do apocalyptic narratives do for society?

While broader contemporary society understands these ideas as backward and bigoted, a postapocalyptic world offers the opportunity to embrace them. These narratives inform how we think about the past, present, and future, and importantly, they influence how we act.

How do you write a post-apocalyptic science fiction?

Decide what kind of apocalyptic story it is: before the world ended, while the world ended, or after the world ended. Decide why the world ended and how: plague, nuclear war, aliens contact, etc. Decide how your character(s) survived the apocalypse (e.g. immune). If you don’t, you’ll leave major holes in your story.