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The fop is a stock character who appears from time to time in fiction.
In English, the word fop is older, but the meaning of an overdressed, frivolously fastidious man may not be; Shakespeare's King Lear contains the word, in the general sense of a fool.
The fashion and socializing aspects of being a fop are present in some interpretations of Batman's second identity Bruce Wayne.
In some works of fiction, heroes pose as fops in order to conceal their true activities.
The fashion and socializing aspects of being a fop are present in some interpretations of Batman's second identity Bruce Wayne; the retiring and ineffectual parts of the stereotype are more a part of Superman's routine as Clark Kent.
A more recent and minor trend is "fop-rock", in which the performers don eighteenth century wigs, lace cravats, and similar costumes to perform, a minor movement that would appear to owe something to glam rock and the New Romantic movement.