Everything2
Near Matches
Ignore Exact
Full Text
Everything2

post-apocalyptic

created by LordStrange

(idea) by bozon (5.7 y) (print)   ?   (I like it!) Sat Nov 13 1999 at 9:40:36

A time following the end of the world; the apocalypse being the last book of the New Testament - Revelation.

Also a period following a nuclear war.

See also: Kurosawa's "Dreams" (the movie) or Walter Miller's novels A Canticle for Leibowitz and St. Leibowitz and the Wild Horse Woman.


(idea) by ClockworkGrue (9 mon) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 2 C!s Sat Sep 08 2001 at 3:11:42

Post-Apocalyptic describes a genre of literature (often science fiction, but there are notable exceptions) that steadily grew in popularity in the latter half of the 20th century. This world-after-the-end-of-the-world can be brought about by religious judgement day, nuclear attack, plague, ecological disaster or any of a host of other nastinesses.

The single unifying factor for all stories involving a post-apocalyptic world is the sudden rapid destruction of a majority of the population, resulting in the remains of humanity existing in isolated pockets. Everything else is flavor.

Perhaps the most famous vision is to be found in movies such as Mad Max and Green Legend Ran, and roleplaying games such as Fallout, Wasteland, and Dark Sun. It usually occurs after a nuclear holocaust, with the world stripped bare, converted to a massive nuclear desert. This world can also be a result of a more mundane depletion of the Earth's resources. In any case, the world is bleak, and often violent. Survival goes to the fittest.

In films such as The Stand and Akira, and stories such as those found on www.theblink.com, the eradication of humanity has no effect on the technology we have produced, other than most of it will no longer be maintained. This type of future can have biological or ecological foundations, or it may be fallout from some major war that claimed most human life. Sometimes the aftermath of a religious judgement day is portrayed like this, as well, although most versions add demonic hordes.

More unusual post-apocalyptic worlds include those exhibited in the anime Nausicaa of the Valley of Wind and the book Wraeththu. In Nausicaa's post-apocalyptic future most of the world has been consumed by forests. Nature is a vibrant, thriving force, but Nature is a harsh mistress, best respected and feared a little. In Storm Constantine's Wraeththu, God blights the Earth to remove mankind and replace it with a new species, superior in every way, who then restore the Earth to a more normal condition.

Are post-apocalyptic stories pessimistic? I'd argue that they are more optimistic than they might first appear. Post-apocalyptic stories all have as a basic assumption that humanity manages to survive huge catastrophes. Not only does humanity survive, but it then procedes to surmount the odds and pull itself back together, albeit with no small amount of violence. Usually the dénoument of a post-apocalyptic story involves the return of something resembling "culture" to humanity, and the heroic characters are usually marked by a humanistic streak that puts them rather out of place in their world, but more in place in ours.


printable version
chaos

Dr. Bloodmoney or How We Got Along After the Bomb Wraeththu The Dark Tower Series Nausicaä of the Valley of Wind
self-destroying prophecy Dreams The Wave Organ The Decline of Western Civilization
fallout Dark Sun The Amtrak Wars A Canticle for Leibowitz
Deus Ex: Invisible War The Stand Nuclear war Apocalypse
Shimmering displays of artificial perfection Reign of Fire denouement The Tribe
dystopia The Day of the Triffids The Legend of the Rollerblade 7 Dawson's Creek
Y'know, if you log in, you can write something here, or contact authors directly on the site. Create a New User if you don't already have an account.
  Epicenter
Login
Password

password reminder
register

Everything2 Help

Cool Staff Picks
Just another sprinkling of indeterminacy
accelerated aging test
Coffee
liquor
In Los Angeles, something is always burning
torch singer
Fifteen Men on a Dead Man's Chest
David Blaine
REMFS
When a health professional is not supportive of breastfeeding
words with all the vowels
Till Eulenspiegel
dialect-specific Chinese characters
First Nations
New Writeups
etouffee
Wild tides guard her secrets(poetry)
Lord Brawl
Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog(review)
a8ksh4
regret(idea)
Heisenberg
Editor Log: July 2008(log)
sam512
halfway homes, catacombs, twilight zones(fiction)
Timeshredder
The Texas UFO Crash of 1897(event)
Heitah
The Dark Knight(review)
ignis_glaciesque
Uppsala(place)
ignis_glaciesque
diffusion of responsibility(idea)
TheOrientalAfrican
The Soft Meadow of my Childhood(event)
BookReader
The Dragon Slayers(fiction)
kohlcass
religiously fashionable(review)
Pavlovna
waulking song(thing)
tentative
Stick Man(poetry)
Ereneta
The Fight with the Snapping Turtle: Or, the American St. George(poetry)
Everything 2 is brought to you by the letter C and The Everything Development Company