Here is the draft of the Genre Document with the additions from the manga lists.
Please let me know if you want to start threads on adding any additional genres. I have that Bob suggested Mecha as its own genre, but no one seconded that. If someone wishes to, let me know.
Only the officially-sanctioned
genres will be allowed in this field. We
assume that this will be accomplished through the database (by a pulldown menu,
for example).
We assume that there will be a
keyword field for more specific information than can be captured in the genre
field.
We recommend that in the future
genres may be added to the official list based on their number of uses as
keyword and their qualification as a genre.
- Adventure
A.
This genre consists of works characterized by an
emphasis on physical and often violent action, exotic locales and danger.
- This
genre includes Action.
- See
also Superhero, Science Fiction, Western-Frontier, War, and Crime,
Jungle, Sword and Sorcery, Espionage, Martial Arts, Sports, Animal, Car, and
Aviation.
- Examples
include Bob Morane, Indiana Jones, Tintin, Captain Easy, and Terry
and the Pirates.
- Drama
- This
genre consists of works containing events having vivid, emotional,
conflicting, or striking interest or results on a human level.
- This
genre includes Melodrama, Soap Opera, Joho, and Ryori.
- See
also Romance, Medical, and Fashion.
- Examples
include Box Office Poison, Love & Rockets, Mary Worth, and A Tale of
Two Cities.
- Humor
- This
genre consists of works that are primarily comical or amusing
- This
genre includes Pantomime and Demenziole.
- See
also Children, Anthropomorphic, Military, Domestic, and Teen.
- Examples
include Mutt and Jeff.
- Non-Fiction
- This
genre consists of works purporting to present factual information.
- This
genre includes Fact and Real Life.
- See
also Math & Science, Nature, History, and Biographical
- Examples
include Ripley's Believe It or Not.
--------------
- Erotica
- This
genre consists of works with sexually explicit content whose primary
purpose is to inspire sexual arousal.
- Example
keywords include Hardcore, Softcore, Gay, and Hentai.
- Examples
include Tijuana Bibles, Little Annie Fannie, Sally Forth, and Dragon Pink
- Satire-Parody
- This
genre consists of works using irony, sarcasm, ridicule and the like to
comment on, denounce, or deride social conventions, human relationships,
or other literary works (including other comics).
- Example
keywords include Pastiche and Social Commentary.
- Examples
include: Mad’s Spy Vs. Spy, Cerebus, Sid the Sexist, Fighting
American, and normalman.
- Superhero
- This genre consists of
works featuring the adventures of costumed
crime fighters, who may also battle alien or
supernatural menaces,
similarly costumed and/or powered criminals,
or other antagonists bent
on conquest, often with the aid of
specialized and/or superhuman
abilities or unique weapons and gadgetry.
Also include stories of
non-costumed characters who otherwise fit
the definition, particularly
if they are often referred to in story as
super-heroes, and also to
stories featuring super-villains.
- Example
keywords include Team and Pulp.
- Examples
include: Superman, The Phantom, and
Marvelman.
- Science
Fiction
- This genre consists of
works featuring advanced scientific,
futuristic, or extra-terrestrial elements.
- Example keywords include
Cyberpunk, Dystopian, Post-Apocalyptic, and Mecha.
- Examples include Buck
Rogers, Star Wars, and Dr. Who.
- Western-Frontier
- This
genre consists of works primarily set in the American frontier during the
19th or early 20th century and often featuring cowboys, Indians,
ranchers, etc., and other period stories in a similar style, set in other
times and places.
- Example
keywords include Native Americans.
- Examples
include Red Ryder, Lucky Luke, and Jonah Hex.
- War
- This genre consists of works
featuring armed forces in combat, or
related, activities during wartime.
- Example keywords include Revolutionary War, World War II,
Navy, Army, and Frogmen.
- Examples include Sgt. Rock, Willie and Joe, and Charley’s War.
- Military
- This
genre consists of works featuring armed forces outside of combat, or
related, situations.
- Example
keywords include Army and Coast Guard.
- Examples
include Sad Sack and Steve Canyon.
- Crime
- This
genre consists of works featuring realistic stories centering on the
commission of a crime or crimes and those who commit the crime or crimes.
- Example
keywords include Gangsters and Prohibition.
- Examples
include Stray Bullets, A True Crime Story, and Torpedo.
- Detective-Mystery
- This
genre consists of works featuring realistic stories centering on the
solving of a crime or mystery and those who solve the crime or mystery.
- Example
keywords include Private Investigator and Whodunnit?
- Examples
include Charlie Chan, Roy Raymond, and P.C. 49.
- Jungle
- This
genre consists of works featuring stories primarily set in the world’s
jungles, rainforests, or other equatorial wildernesses.
- Example
keywords include Africa.
- Examples
include Tarzan, Nyoka, and Saber - King of the Jungle.
- Sword
and Sorcery
- This
genre consists of works featuring stories of epic or heroic fantasy,
violent conflicts, often with elements of romance, and usually elements
of the supernatural.
- Example
keywords include Enchanted Swords and Post-Apocalyptic.
- Examples
include Conan, Axa, and Elric.
- Martial
Arts
- This
genre consists of works featuring stories centered on characters who use
the fighting styles developed in East Asia and similar fighting styles.
- Example
keywords include Kung Fu, Karate, and Judo.
- Examples
include Master of Kung Fu, Street Fighter, and Jimmy Chang.
- Sports
- This
genre consists of works featuring athletic activities.
- Example
keywords include Baseball, Olympics, and Tennis.
- Examples
include Joe Palooka, Strange Sports Stories, and Roy of the Rovers.
- Animal
- This
genre consists of works featuring animals essentially acting like real
animals.
- Example
keywords include Dog, Horse, and Cat.
- Examples
include Lassie, Rex the Wonder Dog, and Inubaka.
- Car
- This
genre consists of works featuring automobiles, race cars, trucks, etc.
- Example
keywords include Hot Rod, NASCAR, Trucks.
- Examples
include Hot Wheels, Speed Racer, Michel Vaillant.
- Aviation
- This genre consists of works centered
on flying planes or other flying machines.
- Example keywords include Jets.
- Examples include Airboy and Steve
Canyon.
- Anthropomorphic
- This
genre consists of works featuring characters acting like humans which are
not human.
- Example
keywords include Disney and Furry Animals.
- Examples
include Donald Duck, Corky the Cat, Cerebus, and Milk and Cheese.
- Children
- This
genre consists of works featuring children (approximately age 12 or
younger) as the primary protagonists, often having to act more reasonably
and resourcefully than their age, in the absence of adult figures.
- An
example keyword term is Kid Gang.
- Examples
include Little Lulu, Peanuts, and Dennis the Menace.
- Teen
- This
genre consists of works featuring teenagers (approximately 13-19 years of
age) as the primary protagonists, particularly in stories that deal with
their coming of age or maturing into the beginnings of adulthood.
- Example
keywords include Pop Music, High School, and School Life.
- Examples
include Dick Cole, Archie, and Kare Kano.
- Domestic
- This genre consists of works centered
on life in and around the home.
- Example keywords include Family and
Sitcom.
- Examples include Blondie and The
Simpsons
- Romance
- This
genre consists of works centered on love and related personal
relationships.
- Example
keywords include Soap Opera, Dating, and Wedding.
- Examples
include Reach for Happiness, Johnny Love, and Dance ‘Til Tomorrow.
- Medical
- This
genre consists of works centered on medicine and the medical profession.
- Example
keywords include Nurses and Doctors.
- Examples
include Rex Morgan, MD; Linda Carter, Student Nurse; and Black Jack.
- Fashion
- This genre consists of works centered
on fashion and the fashion industry
- Example keywords include Models.
- Examples include Katy Keene, Barbie,
and Cloth Road.
- Biography
- This
genre consists of non-fictional works depicting the actual events and
experiences of a real person’s life or real persons’ lives.
- Example
keywords include Memoir and Autobiography.
- Examples
include American Splendor, Political Power, and Wonder Women of History.
- Nature
- This genre consists of works relating
information about the environment and the natural world.
- Example keywords include Ecology.
- Examples include Nature’s Notebook and
Ma Nature’s Curiosity Shop.
- Math & Science
- This genre consists of works relating
information about the mathematical disciplines or the hard sciences.
- Example
keywords include Astronomy and Algebra.
- Examples
include Science Says You’re Wrong If…, and The TRS-80 Computer Whiz-Kids.
- History
- This genre consists of works relating
actual events from history.
- Example keywords include American
History and World War II.
- Examples include Hop Harrigan’s
History of Aviation and Picture Stories from American History.
- Horror-Suspense
- This genre consists of works intended
to terrify, frighten, shock, mystify, or otherwise hold the reader in
tension or dread. Stories in this
genre are often concluded with an ironic plot twist.
- Example keywords include Monsters and
Supernatural.
- Examples include Swamp Thing, The
Walking Dead, and Jack O’Justice.
- Fantasy
- This genre consists of works set in
worlds where magic or the supernatural predominate over the material,
scientific world.
- Example keywords include Mythological
and Fairy-Tale.
- Examples include Pixies, Fables, and
Kelly’s Eye.
Political/Propaganda – out
Gags – out
Sitcom – out
Soap – out
Celebrity – out
Autobiography – out
Occult – out
Monsters – out
Period – out
Adaptation – considered
Undergrounds - considered