Anti-heroes are characters that enter (or are forced) into heroic roles, in spite of having dubious morals, motives, or other characteristics which are at odds with our normal perception of a heroic character. Probably the most common example is the "lovable rouge" character; the pirate Jack Sparrow is just a recent addition to this branch of the anti-hero tree. We see these people as anti-heroes as opposed to simply jerks, fools and sleazeballs through the skill of the storyteller. There are several common ways to go about this. If the character's desires can relate to those the reader/viewer may have, this helps build empathy. Similarly, it can help if the anti-hero enters into troublesome situations the reader/viewer can relate to (e.g., love triangles). Alternately, the anti-hero can have a dramatic sense of personal style which a person can admire, if not respect, and it helps when the author can show how the numerous unsavory aspects of the character mesh together to form a complex psychological whole. Finally, comedy is commonly used to make the anti-hero more palatable.
2007-05-23 20:50:04
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answer #1
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answered by Jellynail 2
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Well from a 'civic participation' point of view I would say Michael Moore is a classic example. Frumpy, overweight, unkempt guy you would not take a second look at. But there he is unapologetically making documentaries with a far left point of view that change some lives and scare the crap out of others. Documentaries that are entertaining enough that people pay money to see them. Documentaries that speak enough truth that his targets see him as a very dangerous person.
2007-05-24 01:44:29
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answer #2
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answered by jehen 7
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can i say Hannibal Lecter? I propose how regularly do you run for the era of a serial killer who has concepts? His point of perception into people grew to become into captivating, and his worldwide view grew to become into unheard of, no? How approximately Milo from capture-22 and shutting Time... sort of an anti-hero, real? that's complicated to unlike some one that could make the excellent out of a bad difficulty. Patrick Bateman is sort of an glaring selection too. he's in basic terms cool, i'm no longer likely to describe myself. i think my well-liked, if I had to p.c.. one from the previous hundred years, could be Frederick Clegg. "yet what have I executed?" (web site seventy one) This guy does not even understand that he's a psycho. And his needs with the aid of the e book look almost noble. he's no longer in it strictly for sexual excitement, in certainty that may not it in any respect if we take his observe for it, he in basic terms needs to "recognize" Miranda. She's his "customer" no longer his prisoner. at cases the reader even feels pity for him with the way Miranda treats him. To me, Fred is absolutely the epitome of the anti-hero. one won't be in a position of of course classify him a villain, yet he definitely isn't a hero the two. What an unusual difficulty Fowles places us in. that's exceptional relatively.
2016-12-11 19:00:09
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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George W. Bush for example is an anti-hero.
Reason - he wouldn't fight in the Vietnam war along side his class-men who had to. He requested 5 deferments when 4 was the law. Now that he stole the presidency twice - he considers himself a hero for sending other peoples children to an illegal war.
2007-05-23 19:38:25
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Dennis Kucinich?!
2007-05-24 01:59:04
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answer #5
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answered by @#$%^ 5
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Marlon Brando.... James Dean......
2007-05-23 19:37:28
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answer #6
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answered by cesare214 6
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charles manson
2007-05-23 20:36:08
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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