Follow TV Tropes

Following

History YMMV / CreationManAndTheMessiah

Go To

OR

Changed: 608

Removed: 608

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None



* CultClassic: The poem has, as mentioned above, a small fanbase. Norwegian poet and activist ''Creator/{{Ingeborg Refling Hagen}}'' went a long way to make people read and understand it, and gained some points in teaching it to the nurses who helped her recover at the end of UsefulNotes/{{World War II}}. Thus, she created a solid, but lojal fanbase, who passed this knowledge on, and thus, the book is more read nowadays than before. On the international side, she inspired a friend to translate it into Czech, a fact that may or may not have inspired the ''Charta 77'' movement and the velvet revolution.

to:

\n* CultClassic: The poem has, as mentioned above, a small fanbase. Norwegian poet and activist ''Creator/{{Ingeborg Refling Hagen}}'' went a long way to make people read and understand it, and gained some points in teaching it to the nurses who helped her recover at the end of UsefulNotes/{{World War II}}. Thus, she created a solid, but lojal loyal fanbase, who passed this knowledge on, and thus, the book is more read nowadays than before. On the international side, she inspired a friend to translate it into Czech, a fact that may or may not have inspired the ''Charta 77'' movement and the velvet revolution.Velvet Revolution.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* CriticalBacklash: The work is ''vastly'' underrated, and suffered from critical dumping from the very start. Even after the UsefulNotes/{{Second World War}}, critics had a tendency to underrate it, preferring the shorter poems of Wergeland. The fact that Wergeland himself worked after a {{viewers are geniuses}} statement didn't help. It has a fanbase anyway, and the next generation of Norwegian poets (like Creator/{{Henrik Ibsen}}) reportedly read it.

to:

* CriticalBacklash: The work is ''vastly'' underrated, and suffered from critical dumping from the very start. Even after the UsefulNotes/{{Second World War}}, critics had a tendency to underrate it, preferring the shorter poems of Wergeland. The fact that Wergeland himself worked after a {{viewers are geniuses}} statement didn't help. It has a fanbase anyway, and the next generation of Norwegian poets (like Creator/{{Henrik Ibsen}}) Creator/HenrikIbsen) reportedly read it.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* CriticalBacklash: The work is ''vastly'' underrated, and suffered from critical dumping from the very start. Even after {{the Second World War}}, critics had a tendency to underrate it, preferring the shorter poems of Wergeland. The fact that Wergeland himself worked after a {{viewers are geniuses}} statement didn`t help. It has a fanbase anyway, and the next generation of Norwegian poets (like {{Henrik Ibsen}}) reportedly read it.

* CultClassic: The poem has, as mentioned above, a small fanbase. Norwegian poet and activist ''Creator/{{Ingeborg Refling Hagen}}'' went a long way to make people read and understand it, and gained some points in teaching it to the nurses who helped her recover at the end of {{World War II}}. Thus, she created a solid, but lojal fanbase, who passed this knowledge on, and thus, the book is more read nowadays than before. On the international side, she inspired a friend to translate it into Czech, a fact that may or may not have inspired the ''Charta 77'' movement and the velvet revolution.

to:

* CriticalBacklash: The work is ''vastly'' underrated, and suffered from critical dumping from the very start. Even after {{the Second the UsefulNotes/{{Second World War}}, critics had a tendency to underrate it, preferring the shorter poems of Wergeland. The fact that Wergeland himself worked after a {{viewers are geniuses}} statement didn`t didn't help. It has a fanbase anyway, and the next generation of Norwegian poets (like {{Henrik Creator/{{Henrik Ibsen}}) reportedly read it.

* CultClassic: The poem has, as mentioned above, a small fanbase. Norwegian poet and activist ''Creator/{{Ingeborg Refling Hagen}}'' went a long way to make people read and understand it, and gained some points in teaching it to the nurses who helped her recover at the end of {{World UsefulNotes/{{World War II}}. Thus, she created a solid, but lojal fanbase, who passed this knowledge on, and thus, the book is more read nowadays than before. On the international side, she inspired a friend to translate it into Czech, a fact that may or may not have inspired the ''Charta 77'' movement and the velvet revolution.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* CultClassic: The poem has, as mentioned above, a small fanbase. Norwegian poet and activist {{Ingeborg Refling Hagen}} went a long way to make people read and understand it, and gained some points in teaching it to the nurses who helped her recover at the end of {{World War II}}. Thus, she created a solid, but lojal fanbase, who passed this knowledge on, and thus, the book is more read nowadays than before. On the international side, she inspired a friend to translate it into Czech, a fact that may or may not have inspired the ''Charta 77'' movement and the velvet revolution.

to:

* CultClassic: The poem has, as mentioned above, a small fanbase. Norwegian poet and activist {{Ingeborg ''Creator/{{Ingeborg Refling Hagen}} Hagen}}'' went a long way to make people read and understand it, and gained some points in teaching it to the nurses who helped her recover at the end of {{World War II}}. Thus, she created a solid, but lojal fanbase, who passed this knowledge on, and thus, the book is more read nowadays than before. On the international side, she inspired a friend to translate it into Czech, a fact that may or may not have inspired the ''Charta 77'' movement and the velvet revolution.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* CriticalBacklash: The work is ''vastly'' underrated, and suffered from critical dumping from the very start. Even after {{the Second World War}}, critics had a tendency to underrate it, preferring the shorter poems of Wergeland. The fact that Wergeland himself worked after a {{viewers are geniuses}} statement didn`t help. It has a fanbase anyway, and the next generation of Norwegian poets (like {{Henrik Ibsen}}) reportedly read it.

* CultClassic: The poem has, as mentioned above, a small fanbase. Norwegian poet and activist {{Ingeborg Refling Hagen}} went a long way to make people read and understand it, and gained some points in teaching it to the nurses who helped her recover at the end of {{World War II}}. Thus, she created a solid, but lojal fanbase, who passed this knowledge on, and thus, the book is more read nowadays than before. On the international side, she inspired a friend to translate it into Czech, a fact that may or may not have inspired the ''Charta 77'' movement and the velvet revolution.

Top