| A genre is any of the traditional divisions of art forms from a single
field of activity into various kinds according to criteria particular to that form.
"Genre" is originally a French word meaning "kind", "sort" or
"type"; in grammatical terminology, it refers to the artificial concept of masculine or feminine grammatical gender (the noun "genre" itself belongs to the masculine
gender in French, for example).
A genre is always a vague term with no fixed boundaries. Many works also cross into multiple genres. In general there are
three types of genre:
In arts such as music, painting, and
sculpture genre is almost mostly determined by format and style.
While vague, genre is also extremely important. Genre considerations are one of the most important factors in determining what
a person will see or read. Many genres have built in audiences, and supporting such as magazines and websites. Books and movies that are hard to plug into a genre are often less successful.
Genre's are also divided into sub-genres in literature endeavour, we often
refer to the "poetic genres" and
the "prose genres". Poetry might be subdivided into epic,
lyric and dramatic, while
prose might be divided into fiction and
non-fiction. These can be further subdivided with dramatic poetry divided
into comedy, tragedy, melodrama and so forth. This division can continue: "comedy" has its own genres,
including farce, comedy of
manners, burlesque, satire.
Hierarchy of genres
In the field of painting, there exists a hierarchy of genres associated with the Académie française which held a central role in Academic art. These genres in hierarchical order are:
These categories played an important role between the 17th century and
the modern era, when painters and critics
began to rebel against the many rules of the Académie française, including the preference for history painting.
Genres by field
Lists of media by genre
External links
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