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Basic Trope: A work causes consternation outside its culture or after an attitude shift.

  • Straight: After attitudes change, Bob's belittling of women comes off badly.
  • Exaggerated: The work was written in the final days of a society that had come to value egotism, cruelty, and cowardice.
  • Justified: Attitudes on issues addressed have changed since the work was written. On the whole, they have changed for the better.
  • Inverted: Fair for Its Day
  • Subverted: A Fair for Its Day work perceived today as Values Dissonance
  • Double Subverted: A work that seemed to be Values Dissonance was in fact bigoted even for the time.
  • Parodied: A comedy that subverts tropes regarded as having Unfortunate Implications.
  • Deconstructed: The reputation of the work is ruined by the bigotry of its themes, regardless of the technical quality of the work (Birth of a Nation).
  • Reconstructed: The work is seen as an enlightening insight on the society of that period, and is valued as such (The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn).
  • Averted: The values of society represented in the story have not changed considerably since it was written.
  • Enforced: "We want this to represent our culture in our day, whatever people may think in sixty years."
  • Lampshaded: "It seems fine and dandy now, but maybe twenty or thirty years down the line what we did today will make people who hear our story cringe. Who knows?"
  • Invoked: The Show Within a Show is a propaganda piece for the bad guys.
  • Defied: The author anticipated, by savviness or luck, where the next big attitude shift would lead us.
  • Discussed: "As a work of art, Mr. Big Bad, your book is good. However, many of my people have serious objections to the content."
  • Conversed: "Look. Alice and Bob are a good team, and definitely better than the Big Bad, but their attitudes on race leave a bad taste."

Tell your woman go back to Values Dissonance and clean it up for you! (Sorry, that line was written in The Fifties.)