There also has been discussion about whether or not supernatural examples would count.
With the current description, the idea of things like a monster preying on children wouldn't count, because of the fantastic elements. That said, even relatively mundane situations were up for debate because they were in a supernatural setting (the example here being from Soul Eater, a child was kidnapped by an evil witch. From the parent's POV, it's plain Adult Fear since she just up and disappeared, but the audience knows the supernatural was involved).
A separate Parental Fear trope might be good for supernatural examples where someone is worried about their kids, though I wonder if the overlap with Papa Wolf and Mama Bear might be an issue.
edited 16th Sep '13 8:09:29 AM by Larkmarn
Found a Youtube Channel with political stances you want to share? Hop on over to this page and add them.I approve of the split, and don't mind doing the work. But Adult Fear needs to be turned into a disambiguation and names for "worried about what's happened to your kid/geriatric-parent" and "worried about things adults have to worry about" need to be picked.
Link to TRS threads in project mode here.Is there a reason why we can't keep Adult Fear?
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." - Richard FeynmanIsn't this trope an Audience Reaction? I've always thought it was about a scene that invokes worry/panic among the adult audience, because it deals with issues that usually concerns them.
The Audience Reaction is Nightmare Fuel. The examples don't look very audience-y to me.
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." - Richard FeynmanMerely if we decide the trope needs repair. A rename isn't required, and the split would make the primary useage of the trope not what the inbounds are looking for.
edited 16th Sep '13 8:48:04 AM by crazysamaritan
Link to TRS threads in project mode here.Really? The description states that it's about using realistic/mundane threats to play up the fear and shock in adult audiences. So wouldn't it be something subjective?
That by itself doesn't make it subjective. Now, if it relied on the response of the audience then it would be subjective.
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." - Richard FeynmanI'm sure it does need a rename given the general sentiment is that the only adult fear is one relating to children which isn't the trope's intent.
To heck with the subjectivity debate, I'm not even convinced this is a trope.
Huh? How is that not a trope?
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." - Richard FeynmanThe Parental Fear version is legit, but beyond that I've never really come across any reason to think the above-quoted "trope" is an actual recurring pattern in fiction. There are examples on the page, sure, but they mostly read like audience reactions and really seem like misplaced Nightmare Fuel entries.
To put it another way, I kind of want to see some evidence that this is actually a thing that happens and not just some tropers lumping their particular views on fear into a page.
edited 17th Sep '13 1:00:27 AM by nrjxll
That was what I was saying, actually. The trope looks like it's about Nightmare Fuel, but more specifically intended for adult audiences due to the context of the issue presented.
edited 17th Sep '13 1:18:09 AM by theAdeptrogue
Nightmare Fuel is an Audience Reaction. It has nothing to do with things meant to be scary for anyone.
That said, I agree with the idea that Parental Fear is a trope and Adult Fear of somewhat questionable tropability. The concept of adult-specific "fear" that flies over kids may be a trope as well.
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." - Richard FeynmanThis trope reads like what Parental Fear should be but I don't know if it means that there shouldn't be an Adult Fear trope too, the sort of fear that kids generally will not understand seems to be the intention of this trope specifically but got crowded out. It's the lack of acknowledging there's more subjects of fear for adults than the typical parent based one which might be a sticking point.
edited 17th Sep '13 2:27:14 AM by treelo
@11- a rename without redefinition would not change that.
Link to TRS threads in project mode here.It wouldn't, we need to at least get some idea of what it is before we can go about splitting or renaming.
Adult Fear is about "mundane" fears that people can actually apply to their lives — it's hard to get worked up about the possibility of alien invasion or demonic possession, but losing everything to financial downturn, being helpless while family members die of disease or injury, or having a loved one betray you are all real things that happen to real people in real life.
If we split it, what would the two split tropes be?
Really from Jupiter, but not an alien.The proposed split that I've seen is
- Parental Fear: Fear that your child (or senile relative) will be injured/die.
- (The rest of this trope, as you wrote it)
The reason for the proposed split is that the examples are almost exclusively of the Parental Fear nature. I strongly suggest that Adult Fear be turned into a redirect for Parental Fear, because the inbounds are almost certainly for the Parental Fear subtrope.
This trope has apparently seen Missing Supertrope Syndrome in reverse. The one subtrope has eaten up space preventing the accumulation of examples for the supertrope.
Link to TRS threads in project mode here.The "Parental Fear" trope already exists as Outliving One's Offspring.
Really from Jupiter, but not an alien.No, that's the trope for after they die. Parental Fear is the worrying before that trope.
Link to TRS threads in project mode here.... is Parental Fear really a trope? I mean, people don't want to lose their loved ones. That's just sort of... how the universe works.
Found a Youtube Channel with political stances you want to share? Hop on over to this page and add them.I don't think that actually matters in either direction when talking about tropewortiness.
Rather, I'd ask what would go under such a trope. "Something bad happens to a child" or "Parents worry about what could happen to their children".
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." - Richard Feynman
Crown Description:
What would be the best way to fix the page?
We seem to have two tropes at play here given how the description says the trope is about real world fears any adult could have and how most examples are about kids being in the line of danger which the trope isn't exclusively about though it and the page image suggest that's what it means. Some good examples which have nothing to do with kids at all are kinda lost within the majority of "kid is in peril" examples which suggests most tropers think the trope is about that specific fear and that one only therefore broken.
I'm asking for a split into two separate tropes regarding kid examples and non-kid examples or a rename into Parental Fear or similar.
edited 16th Sep '13 8:06:59 AM by treelo