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Prolepsis

Mar 23, 2026
A lively dive into prolepsis, the flash-forward technique traced from modernist origins to its ubiquity in contemporary fiction and film. The conversation explores why opening scenes often depict severe violence and how that style dramatizes structural and unequal vulnerability. It considers prolepsis as a narrative form that both highlights inevitability and leaves room for imagining political change.
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INSIGHT

Prolepsis Defined And Its Rise

  • Prolepsis is a flash forward that reveals a future event and then traces steps leading to it.
  • Defined by Gérard Genette in the 1970s as a modernist narrative maneuver, it moved from a marginal literary device into widespread use in contemporary fiction and film.
INSIGHT

Why Prolepsis Pairs With Violence

  • Prolepsis pairs especially well with violent openings like crashes or attacks, becoming ubiquitous in contemporary storytelling.
  • Fisk noticed many novels and films now begin with a violent scene and then circle back to the causes, making the pairing a recognizable trope.
INSIGHT

Prolepsis Versus Foreshadowing

  • Prolepsis differs from foreshadowing by being a full revelation rather than a tentative hint.
  • Fisk contrasts A Hundred Years of Solitude's inescapable proleptic firing squad with foreshadowing's retained character agency.
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