Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - What exactly is Versailles?

What exactly is Versailles?

Versailles literature is a discourse mode of "low-key ostentation", also called Xue Fan. This discourse mode first suppresses and then promotes, publicly belittles and praises, talks to itself, and pretends to show off in a distressed and unhappy tone. People who are familiar with Versailles literature are called "Versailles". The word "Versailles literature" comes from the comic book "The Rose of Versailles", which is popular on the Internet because of the emotional writer "Meng Qiqi".

The Palace of Versailles originated from the name of the French Palace, and now it is extended to a self-proclaimed aristocratic spirit in China. It refers to some people who show off their exquisiteness, elegance and uniqueness in the circle of friends by pretending to be euphemistic, restraining first and then promoting.

The example of Versailles

The literature of Versailles, referred to as "Xue Fan" for short, is a mockery of netizens who are keen to reveal "the clues of aristocratic life" unintentionally through restraining before promoting, asking questions and answering questions or the third-person perspective. Such people are also nicknamed "Versailles Rose" by netizens. Xiao Naiqiu, the founder of Xue Fan and a netizen, first noticed that this phenomenon originated from a friend spitting at her.

Some people describe the luxury hotels, luxury goods and red wine they enjoy every day on social platforms, and there is a "faint" sense of superiority between the lines. Little Milk Ball said that she was inspired by the Japanese cartoon "The Rose of Versailles", which tells the aristocratic life of Versailles in France at the end of 18. "I just want to use this word to ridicule those people.

They undoubtedly want to express their superiority in an unpretentious tone. "Little Milk Ball thinks:" Versailles is a kind of spirit, which has nothing to do with money and status. Anyone can become a Versailles person through their own efforts. "In the big square of the Internet, everyone's desire to express is stimulated to the greatest extent.