Editing Battlestar Wiki:Canon
From Battlestar Wiki, the free, open content Battlestar Galactica encyclopedia and episode guide
More actions
The edit can be undone.
Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
| Latest revision | Your text | ||
| Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
{{Battlestar Wiki List of Policies}} | {{Battlestar Wiki List of Policies}} | ||
In science-fiction works, the term '''"canon"''' describes characters, events, and locales that are generated and recognized officially by the creators of the fictional universe. The term was originally a term used to differentiate heretical from accepted scripture in the [[w:Roman Catholic Church|Catholic Church]]. | |||
In science-fiction works, the term '''"canon"''' describes characters, events, and locales that are generated | |||
A '''"non-canonical"''' story, in comparison, is not considered an official element of the storyline in a particular work of fiction, commonly a series of novels of a television program. | A '''"non-canonical"''' story, in comparison, is not considered an official element of the storyline in a particular work of fiction, commonly a series of novels of a television program. | ||
| Line 12: | Line 11: | ||
The SF television show ''[[w:Babylon 5|Babylon 5]]'' is unique in that all published works are considered canonical by the series's creators. However, other shows such as ''[[memoryalpha:Star Trek|Star Trek]]'' have many officially licensed stories (books and comics) that are considered non-canonical and whose story content is therefore sometimes contradicted by the aired episodes or theatrical films later. The ''[[w:Star Wars|Star Wars]]'' franchise generally attempts to unify its licensed novels and comics into the central movie storyline, but the movies are not bound by details established in the novels either; while they sometimes make [[Wookieepedia:List of C-canon elements in the films|references to novels or comics]], they also contradict them in other places. | The SF television show ''[[w:Babylon 5|Babylon 5]]'' is unique in that all published works are considered canonical by the series's creators. However, other shows such as ''[[memoryalpha:Star Trek|Star Trek]]'' have many officially licensed stories (books and comics) that are considered non-canonical and whose story content is therefore sometimes contradicted by the aired episodes or theatrical films later. The ''[[w:Star Wars|Star Wars]]'' franchise generally attempts to unify its licensed novels and comics into the central movie storyline, but the movies are not bound by details established in the novels either; while they sometimes make [[Wookieepedia:List of C-canon elements in the films|references to novels or comics]], they also contradict them in other places. | ||
Aside from stories, '''"official"''' sources are another important resource. This refers to an approved document or piece of information that has been used collectively by the production staff of any series or movie as a starting point for writing and filming, but has (so far) been used only behind the scenes. This differentiates it from canonical information, which has made its way to the screen for the viewing audience. Since this information has not appeared on screen, writers and other production staff are free to violate official sources if they believe a story could benefit from it, and viewers should therefore not grant it the level of reliability of canon information. Jane Espenson described [[Battlestar_Galactica_Map_of_the_12_Colonies|one such official source]] as "quasi-canon."<ref name="io9">{{cite_web|url=http://io9.com/5742034/a-detailed-map-of-battlestar-galacticas-twelve-colonies?skyline=true&s=i|title=Detailed Map Of Battlestar Galactica's Twelve Colonies|date=24 January 2010|accessdate=29 January 2011|last=Anders|first=Charlie Jane|format=|language=English}}</ref> | |||
Aside from stories, '''"official"''' sources are another important resource. This refers to an approved document or piece of information that has been used collectively by the production staff of any series or movie as a starting point for writing and filming, but has (so far) been used only behind the scenes. This differentiates it from canonical information, which has made its way to the screen for the viewing audience. Since this information has not appeared on screen, writers and other production staff are free to violate official sources if they believe a story could benefit from it, and viewers should therefore not grant it the level of reliability of canon information. | |||
==What's Canonical in ''Battlestar Galactica?''== | ==What's Canonical in ''Battlestar Galactica?''== | ||
| Line 24: | Line 22: | ||
Battlestar Wiki does not allow [[fan fiction]] or [[fanwanking]] of any kind in whole or in part in any article. | Battlestar Wiki does not allow [[fan fiction]] or [[fanwanking]] of any kind in whole or in part in any article. | ||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||