Humanism refers to a literary genre that is recreated by using elements such as characters, story lines or background settings in original cartoons, animations, novels and film and television works.
In recent years, with the intensive exposure of social figures such as sports figures, entertainment figures and political figures, fan fiction, a real figure in humanistic novels, has gradually emerged.
Authors of the same humanities are usually loyal fans of the original works. They express their love for the original work and their independent imagination of the role by creating the same humanities.
Fellow people can unfold stories that are not revealed in the original, go deep into the inner world of the characters, or put the characters in the original into different backgrounds and situations to create. Some scholars may continue to write, rewrite or supplement the content of the original work, while others will completely re-create.
Development history
Scholars can be traced back to the Meiji period in Japan, and the earliest fan magazine that Japan can confirm is My Music Library, a circulation magazine founded by the literary group "Friends of Dog Nights" composed of novel Kozaki Hongye and others.
After the Volodo Library came into being, Waco poets of A Liang Liangmu School founded Liangmu in A Liang, followed by Masaoka Shiki and Xiamu's Looking at the Moon, Takabin Xu Zi's Little Du Fu and other fan magazines. These fan magazines have bred a large number of poets and novelists. At that time, members of fan magazines were called fans.
During the New Culture Movement in China, a large number of fan magazines appeared, such as New Youth and Yusi. With the changes of the times, the main carrier of humanistic education has shifted from magazines to the internet.