Floating timeline

{{short description|Fictional story telling device}}

A floating timeline (also known as a sliding timescale){{cite book |title=Superheroes!: Capes and Crusaders in Comics and Films

|page=22 |last=Kaveney |first=Roz |authorlink=Roz Kaveney |publisher=Bloomsbury Academic |year=2008 |isbn=9781845115692}} is a device used in fiction, particularly in long-running comics and animation, to explain why characters age little or not at all while the setting around them remains contemporary to the real world. The term is used in the comics community to refer to series that take place in a "continuous present".{{Citation|last=Jeffery|first=Scott|title=The Rhizome of Comic Book Culture|date=2016|work=The Posthuman Body in Superhero Comics: Human, Superhuman, Transhuman, Post/Human|pages=37–67|editor-last=Jeffery|editor-first=Scott|series=Palgrave Studies in Comics and Graphic Novels|place=New York|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan US|language=en|doi=10.1057/978-1-137-54950-1_3|isbn=978-1-137-54950-1}} Floating timelines are also used when creators do not need or want their characters to age, typically in children's books and animated television shows.{{Cite book|last1=Goertz|first1=Allie|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xndPDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT98|title=100 Things The Simpsons Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die|last2=Prescott|first2=Julia|last3=Oakley|first3=Bill|last4=Weinstein|first4=Josh|date=2018-09-18|publisher=Triumph Books|isbn=978-1-64125-109-9|language=en}}

Definition

When certain stories in comics, especially origin stories, are rewritten, they often retain key events which are updated to a contemporary time. Floating timelines are used as a plot device to "explain or explain away inconsistencies in the way that events and characters exist within a world".{{Cite book|last1=Waltonen|first1=Karma|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CS6sDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT208|title=The Simpsons' Beloved Springfield: Essays on the TV Series and Town That Are Part of Us All|last2=Vernay|first2=Denise Du|date=2019-08-30|publisher=McFarland|isbn=978-1-4766-7455-1|language=en}}

According to Roz Kaveney, a floating timeline is used in comics because of "the commercial need to keep certain characters going forever". Kevin Wanner has compared superheroes in comics to mythological figures, and writes that the use of a sliding timescale in comics is similar to the way ageless figures in myths are depicted interacting with the contemporary world of the storyteller.{{cite book |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2018| title=Irreverence and the Sacred: Critical Studies in the History of Religions |editor-last1=Urban |editor-first1=Hugh |editor-last2=Johnson |editor-first2=Greg |editor1-link=Hugh Urban |last=Wanner |first=Kevin J. |chapter=Authority Apart from Truth: Superhero Comic Book Stories as Myths |page=84}}

Examples

= Animation =

Animated media often uses floating timelines. The long-running animated television series The Simpsons uses a floating timeline; episodes showing the early lives of Marge and Homer have been set in both the 1970s and the 1990s, and the characters do not age despite society and technology changing around them.

In the Japanese anime series Pokémon, none of the characters have aged since the series began in the 1990s. Chief director Kunihiko Yuyama has said that protagonist Ash Ketchum is eternally ten years old, and that time has not passed since the beginning of his journey.{{Cite web |last=0chazuke |title="Ash is eternally 10 years old" |url=https://0chazuke.tumblr.com/post/163278266887/ash-is-eternally-10-years-old-7-tidbits-about |access-date=2023-10-27 |website=Tumblr}}

The Nickelodeon television series The Fairly OddParents subverts the concept of a floating timeline in the episode "Timmy's Secret Wish!", where it is revealed that the protagonist had wished for everyone on Earth to stop aging and that 50 years has passed in the show's timeline.

= Comics =

The Archie comics feature characters who do not age, despite references to various time periods over the course of the series.{{cite book |title=Archie: His First 50 Years |page=92 |last=Phillips |first=Charles |publisher=Abbeville Press |year=1991 |isbn=9781558592063}} Similarly, Hergé's Tintin comics take place from the 1920s to the 1970s, while Tintin and the other characters do not age.

Many long-established comic characters exist in a floating timeline. In the Marvel Universe, certain events drift through time to remain about 15 years before the "floating present". For example, the origin story of Iron Man always takes place in a war. Initially this was shown as the early stages of American involvement in the Vietnam War contemporary to the first publication of the character in 1962, but in newer stories the specific war is updated.{{cite book |last=Méon |first=J. M. |title=Comics Memory: Archives and Styles |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |year=2018 |isbn=978-3319917450 |editor-last1=Ahmed |editor-first1=Maaheen |pages=203–204 |chapter=Sons and Grandsons of Origins: Narrative Memory in Marvel Superhero Comics |editor-last2=Crucifix |editor-first2=Benoît}} Although Batman first appeared in 1939, his stories are often updated to contemporary (or sometimes historical or futuristic) time periods.{{Cite web |last=Miller |first=David |date=2024-01-01 |title=Batman Complete Movie Timeline & Multiverse Explained |url=https://screenrant.com/batman-movie-timeline-explained-multiverse/ |access-date=2024-04-08 |website=ScreenRant |language=en}} Various incarnations of his sidekick Robin tend to stay young for a period before being aged up, with a new character then taking on the Robin persona, a common trend in the superhero genre.{{Cite web |last=Failde |first=Juliana |date=2020-07-02 |title=Every Robin in DC Comics and Who They Became After |url=https://www.cbr.com/batman-robins-who-they-became-after/ |access-date=2024-04-08 |website=CBR |language=en}} However, comic characters' ages and backstories often change depending on the author writing the story. Some characters, especially ones with magical or extraterrestrial origins, avoid the floating timeline trope by aging while appearing young.

A noteworthy exception to the floating timeline trope is the comic strip Luann, where characters age approximately one month for every real-world year.

Another famous exception is the long-running character Judge Dredd of the British weekly anthology comic 2000 AD. Time passes in the Judge Dredd strip in real time, so as a year passes in life, a year passes in the comic.

= Novels =

Author P. G. Wodehouse set his comedic Jeeves series, about English gentleman Bertie Wooster and his valet, when they were written, though the characters age little or not at all. This allowed for humorous references to contemporary popular culture in the stories, which were published between 1915 and 1974.{{cite book |last=Thompson |first=Kristin |authorlink=Kristin Thompson |title=Wooster Proposes, Jeeves Disposes or Le Mot Juste |location=New York |publisher= James H. Heineman, Inc. |date=1992 |isbn=0-87008-139-X |pages=343–345}}

Antonia Forest's Marlow series is about an English family who are children during the Second World War, yet are still teenagers in the later books set in the 1970s.

In the Alex Rider series, published from 2000 to 2023, the protagonist goes from using a Game Boy to experiencing virtual reality in just a year of his life, remaining 14 to 15 years old throughout the series. Author Anthony Horowitz has said that he didn't want to "lose the innocence of the character",{{Cite web |date=2011-03-25 |title=Anthony Horowitz: Why am I killing off my hero? It's elementary, of course! {{!}} Journalism |url=https://anthonyhorowitz.com/journalism/article/anthony-horowitz-why-am-i-killing-off-my-hero-its-elementary-of-course |access-date=2024-04-08 |website=Anthony Horowitz |language=en}} and that it was important for Alex to remain young because the plots required him to play the part of an unassuming child spy.{{Cite news |last1=Higson |first1=Charlie |last2=Simon |first2=Francesca |last3=Rosen |first3=Michael |date=2016-07-23 |title=Harry Potter and the curse of middle age: should fictional children ever grow up? |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2016/jul/23/harry-potter-fictional-children-grow-up |access-date=2024-04-08 |work=The Guardian |language=en-GB |issn=0261-3077}}{{Cite news |date=2015-11-09 |title=Anthony Horowitz webchat – post your questions now |url=http://www.theguardian.com/books/live/2015/nov/06/anthony-horowitz-webchat-trigger-mortis-dinner-with-saddam |access-date=2024-04-08 |work=the Guardian |language=en-GB |issn=0261-3077}}

Rex Stout used a floating timeline for his novels and short stories featuring detective Nero Wolfe. Stout stated "I didn't age the characters because I didn't want to. That would have ... centered attention on the characters rather than the stories".McAleer, John, Rex Stout: A Biography (1977, Little, Brown and Company; {{ISBN|0-316-55340-9}}), p. 383; and McAleer, John, Royal Decree (1983, Pontes Press, Ashton, Maryland), p. 49.

In The Mysterious Affair at Styles, Agatha Christie's detective Hercule Poirot was depicted as a Belgian refugee during the First World War, and imagined as already elderly by Christie in 1920. Christie went on writing Poirot novels until 1975, but only in Curtain: Poirot's Last Case does old age finally catch up with him.

In Casino Royale, published in 1953, James Bond is said to have taken up espionage after the Second World War. Bond would go on through the decades of the Cold War and beyond without aging.

See also

References

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