In art and literature, a work that imitates another's style, or a medley composed of fragments from an original. The intention is normally homage, rather than ridicule (as in parody). In art, a pastiche is an image that borrows styles and elements of other pieces, but is not necessarily a direct copy.
In
The Waste Land (1922), T S
Eliot included allusions and quotations from a variety of sources such as nursery rhymes, Dante, and Kyd, all within a few lines of each other. Some writers and topics have been particularly prone to pastiche, for example Ian
Fleming's James Bond novels.
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