In Popular Culture
Some western cultural examples:
- In science fiction fandom, some fans classify all non-fans as "mundanes."
- In historical reenactment groups such as the Society for Creative Anachronism (which originated in science fiction fandom):
- some participants classify all non-participants as "mundanes".
- Similarly, one's "mundane" name is the legal name one goes by in the outside world.
- Further, "Mundanes," sometimes shortened to just "'danes" (not to be confused with people of Danish descent), is also a term for normal everyday clothes, as opposed to those dressed in historical garb.
- In the science fiction television series Babylon 5, telepathic humans (especially Psi Corps members) classify all non-telepathic humans as "mundanes". The classification is employed mainly, but not solely, by telepathic characters who have telepath-supremacist ideologies (such ideologies being one of the issues dealt with by the series), and was deliberately chosen to mirror the classification in science fiction fandom.
- In fantasy literature the term is sometimes used to apply to non-magical people or the non-magical society. It is used in Piers Anthony's Xanth novels and Bill Willingham's comic book series Fables (often shortened to "mundies" in the latter).
- In Cassandra Clare's book series The Mortal Instruments and The Infernal Devices, humans who were not Shadowhunters were referred to as "mundanes".
- In furry fandom, it is used to describe non-furries, or "humans".
- In sanguinarian circles the word "mundane" means "non sanguinarian", although some consider it derogatory.
- In text-based online role-playing games, the term is commonly used to refer to the player as opposed to their character, typically shortened to "mun".
- Mundane science fiction is science fiction that does not make use of interstellar travel or other common tropes of the genre.
- Within the scope of the software communities of free and open-source software some proponents of the respective movements classify those that do not know enough about their views as "mundanes", signifying their normalcy, their lack of being beyond the regular users of computers.
Read more about this topic: Mundane
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