Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Writing about fiction
This guideline is a part of the English Wikipedia's Manual of Style. It is a generally accepted standard that editors should attempt to follow, though occasional exceptions may apply. Any substantive edit to this page should reflect consensus. When in doubt, discuss first on the talk page. |
This page in a nutshell: Wikipedia articles should describe fiction and fictional elements from the perspective of the real world, not from the perspective of the fiction itself. Jump to conclusions for a more detailed summary of this guideline's contents. |
Manual of Style (MoS) |
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Wikipedia contains numerous articles on fiction-related subjects, fictional worlds, and elements from them.
When an article is created, the subject's real-world notability should be established according to the general notability guideline by including independent reliable secondary sources—this will also ensure that there is enough source material for the article to be comprehensive and factually accurate.
Next, if the subject warrants inclusion in Wikipedia, editors should consider what to write about a subject, and how to best present that information. Because these questions are complementary, they should not be interpreted in isolation from one another, and editors should address both these questions simultaneously in order to create a well-written article.
This page is a guideline, not policy, and it should be approached with common sense and the occasional exception. However, following the basic notions laid out in this guideline is generally a good way to improve articles on fictional topics.
Real-world perspective
Articles about fiction, like all Wikipedia articles, should adhere to the real world as their primary frame of reference. The approach is to describe the subject matter from the perspective of the real world, in which the work of fiction and its publication are embedded. It necessitates the use of both primary and secondary information.
Exemplary aspects of real-world perspective include:
- Careful differentiation between the work of fiction itself and aspects of its production process and publication, such as the impact a work of fiction has had in the real world (see also below)
- Careful differentiation between narrated time and fictional chronology on the one hand, and narrative time and actual chronology of real-world events on the other (of particular relevance to all film and TV-related topics)
- The presentation of fictional material
- particularly for film and TV-related topics, this may include cinematographical aspects
- for literature, this may include writing style and literary technique
- Description of fictional characters, places and devices as objects of the narrative
- Making (referenced!) mention of the author's intention
See below for a list of exemplary articles which employ a consistent real-world perspective. However, consider that real-world perspective is not an "optional" quality criterion but a general, basic requirement for all articles.
The problem with in-universe perspective
An in-universe perspective describes the narrative from the perspective of characters within the fictional universe, treating it as if it were real and ignoring real-world context and sourced analysis. The threshold of what constitutes in-universe writing is making any effort to re-create or uphold the illusion of the original fiction by omitting real-world info.
Many fan wikis and fan websites (see below) take this approach, but it should not be used for Wikipedia articles. An in-universe perspective is inaccurate and misleading, inviting unverifiable original research by relying on primary source. Most importantly, in-universe perspective defies community consensus as to what we do not want Wikipedia to be or become.
See also the sections on fair use, accuracy and appropriate weight, and templates.
Problems associated with an in-universe perspective include:
- Disregarding all or most aspects of a work of fiction as a creative endeavour
- A plot synopsis written like a historical account
- Fictography – a fictional character article or section written as if it were a biography
- Description of fictional places written like a geographical account
- Using past tense when discussing the plot or any of its elements
- Trying to reconcile contradictions or fill gaps in a fictional continuity, rather than reporting them as such
- Discussing a fictional topic's appearances in major works and obscure spin-off material in equal detail
- Placing spiritual successors in the same continuity as the works that inspired them
- Using throwaway comments or jokes as a source of information
- Using infoboxes intended for real world topics
- Using image captions for film stills and screenshots asserting that what is depicted is the character, rather than a film scene depicting the character
- Referring to the fictional events or dates which occur in the story, rather than the fictional works themselves
- Ordering works by their fictional chronology, rather than the actual order they were published
Primary and secondary information
Where the above section discusses the principal perspective from which an article is written and makes the distinction between real-world perspective versus "in-universe" perspective, this section discusses the incorporation of information. Please see also the related policy on the use of primary, secondary, and tertiary sources.
Primary information
The term primary information describes information that originates from primary sources about the fictional universe, i.e., the original work of fiction or an affiliated work of fiction (e.g., another episode of the same series). Even with strict adherence to the real-world perspective, writing about fiction always includes using the original fiction itself as a source. See also the sections on fair use and templates.
Examples of information available in primary sources include:
- the birth and death dates of fictional characters;
- performance statistics or characteristics for fictional vehicles or devices;
- history of fictional locations or organizations;
- background information on fictional creatures; and,
- the plot itself
Secondary information
The term secondary information describes information external to the fictional universe, and is usually taken from secondary sources about the work of art or the fictional world contained therein, or from primary and secondary sources about the author and the circumstances of creation. Publications affiliated with a particular work of fiction (e.g. fan magazines), are mostly not considered suitable secondary sources about the primary works. However, such publications may be suitable primary or secondary sources in an article about the fan publication itself or other related topics.
The rule of thumb is to use as much secondary information as necessary and useful to give the article a real-world perspective, not more and not less. Another rule of thumb is that if the topic is notable, secondary information should be available and possibly already in the article.
Examples of useful information typically provided by secondary sources about the original work, or primary and secondary sources about information external to the work:
- the author or creator
- other key figures of the creation process, e.g., the cinematographer for films or notable translators for novels
- the film or software company or publishing house
- the design
- the development, both before its first appearance and over the course of the narrative
- real-world factors that have influenced the work or fictional element
- for a fictional character in a dramatic production, the actor who portrayed the role and their approach to playing that character
- foreign translations
- its popularity among the public
- its sales figures (for commercial offerings)
- its reception by critics
- a critical analysis of the subject
- the influence of the work on later creators and their projects
Contextual presentation
There are generally two possible issues to be considered: The context of the production and the context of the original fiction. Whenever the original fiction itself is the subject of the article, all out-of-universe information needs to be set in the context of that original fiction (e.g., by including a plot summary). When the article concerns, e.g., a documentary about that original fiction, then it would not necessarily be important to discuss the content of the original source material.
Details of creation, development, etc. relating to a particular fictional element are more helpful if the reader understands the role of that element in the story. This often involves providing plot summaries, character descriptions or biographies, or direct quotations. By convention, these synopses should be written in the present tense, as this is the way that the story is experienced as it is read or viewed (see also WP:TENSE). At any particular point in the story there is a 'past' and a 'future', but whether something is 'past' or 'future' changes as the story progresses. It is simplest and conventional to recount the entire description as continuous 'present'.
Presenting fictional material from the original work is fine, provided passages are short, are given the proper context, and do not constitute the main portion of the article. If such passages stray into the realm of interpretation, secondary sources must be provided to avoid original research.
Plot summaries
- Main articles: Wikipedia:Plot summaries and Wikipedia:How to write a plot summary.
Plot summaries can be written from the real-world perspective by referring to specific works or parts of works ("In the first book", "In Act II") or describing things from the author or creator's perspective ("The author introduces", "The story describes"). This gives the summary a more grounded tone and makes it more accessible to those unfamiliar with the source material. This style of writing should be preferred for plot summaries that encompass multiple works, such as a series of novels. Such conventions are not as important for plot summaries of single works, such as novels that are not part of a series; nevertheless, some real-world language at the beginning of such summaries is often good style. The length of a plot summary should be carefully balanced with the length of the other sections. Strictly avoid creating pages consisting only of a plot summary.
Summary style approach
Sometimes, when an article gets long (see Wikipedia:Article size), a section of the article is made into its own article, and the handling of the subject in the main article is condensed to a brief summary. This is completely normal Wikipedia procedure; see for example Wikipedia:Summary style, which explains the technique. The new article is sometimes called a "spinout" or "spinoff" of the main article. For fictional works, these spinout articles are typically lists of characters or other elements that usually rely on the coverage of the parent topic, and may lack demonstration of real-world coverage through sources dedicated specifically to those elements (see Wikipedia:Lists). Very rarely should such spinout articles be about a singular topic (e.g., character, plot item); either that topic has demonstrated its own notability, or should be merged into the main article or existing spinout articles.
The spinout article should concisely provide details of the topic or topics covered in the work – just because the spinout article is given more space to grow does not mean that excessive plot summaries or fictional character biographies are appropriate. As with other fictional works, the spinout article should be written in an "out-of-universe" style. As with all other Wikipedia articles, the spinout article needs to be verifiable, must possess no original research, and must reflect a neutral point of view.
Notability
There are notability prerequisites to be met by all subjects to warrant articles specifically about them. As mentioned earlier, the rule of thumb is that if the topic is sufficiently notable, secondary sources should be available and should ideally be included on article creation.
Accuracy and appropriate weight
It is not only important that articles be written from a neutral point of view and that they give due weight to all aspects of the subject but also that appropriate weight be given to all elements of the article page, including, e.g., infoboxes and succession boxes as well as images and the text. The goal is to attain the greatest possible degree of accuracy in covering the topic at hand, which is also the basic rationale behind discouraging, e.g., disproportionately long plot summaries and in-universe writing.
Fair use
As the Wikipedia servers are located in the U.S. state of Florida, Wikipedia articles must conform to U.S. copyright laws. It has been held in a number of court cases that any work which re-tells original ideas from a fictional source, in sufficient quantity without adding information about that work, or in some way analysing and explaining it, may be construed as a derivative work or a copyright violation. This may apply irrespective of the way information is presented, in or out of the respective fictional universe, or in some entirely different form such as a quizbook or "encyclopedia galactica".
Information about copyrighted fictional worlds and plots of works of fiction can be provided only under a claim of fair use, and Wikipedia's fair-use policy holds that "the amount of copyrighted work used should be as little as possible". Many works of fiction covered by Wikipedia are protected by copyright. Some works are sufficiently old that their copyright has expired, or the rights may have been released in some way, such as under the GFDL, or into the public domain.
Conclusions
When writing about fiction, keep the following in mind:
- The principal frame of reference is always the real world, in which both the work of fiction and its publication are embedded: write from a real-world perspective;
- Both primary and secondary information is necessary for a real-world perspective: maintain a balanced use of both primary and secondary sources;
- Unpublished personal observation and interpretation of the article's subject and primary sources are not acceptable on Wikipedia: avoid original research;
- All included information needs to be verifiable and derive from and be supported by reliable sources, and all sources (including the primary sources) need to be appropriately cited in the article: reference all information and cite your sources;
- All relevant aspects must be given due weight in all elements of the article page, including text, images, elements of layout and even the article title: give weight where weight is due;
- Readability and comprehensibility: put all information into context with the original fiction;
- Check with the image use policy before adding images to any article;
- Avoid creating lists of trivia; instead, incorporate relevant information into the body of the article;
- Wikipedia's fair-use policy: the amount of copyrighted work used should be as little as possible.
List of exemplary articles
The following is a partial list of articles about fiction or elements from fiction that follow the real-world perspective. These are good examples to follow for editors seeking to cover fictional subjects on Wikipedia. For other good examples, see the lists of articles that have been rated at Good and Featured status.
- Note: Keep in mind that the content in these articles may have changed since the time of their original listing here.
- Complete works
- Novels
- The Country Wife
- The General in His Labyrinth
- Halo: Contact Harvest
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
- The Illuminatus! Trilogy
- Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
- Mary: A Fiction
- Pattern Recognition (novel)
- Starship Troopers
- To Kill a Mockingbird
- Films
- 300 (film)
- Alien vs. Predator (film)
- Battlefield Earth (film)
- Bride of Frankenstein
- E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial
- Fritz the Cat (film)
- Gremlins
- Jaws (film)
- Jurassic Park (film)
- Tenebrae (film)
- Television series
- Animaniacs
- Arrested Development (TV series)
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV series)
- Carnivàle
- Cold Feet
- Degrassi: The Next Generation
- Doctor Who
- Firefly (TV series)
- Joking Apart
- Television episodes
- "200" (Stargate SG-1)
- "Abyssinia, Henry"
- "Cape Feare"
- "Damien" (South Park)
- "Doomsday" (Doctor Who)
- "The Other Woman"
- "Hell Is Other Robots"
- "Homer's Enemy"
- "Meet Kevin Johnson"
- "The Last Temptation of Krust"
- Comics
- The Adventures of Tintin
- Bone Sharps, Cowboys, and Thunder Lizards
- Halo Graphic Novel
- Krazy Kat
- Roy of the Rovers
- "Sinestro Corps War"
- Tokyo Mew Mew
- Watchmen
- Video games
- Agatha Christie: And Then There Were None
- Age of Empires
- Halo: Combat Evolved
- Kingdom Hearts
- The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time
- Other
- Characters or character lists
- Novel characters
- The Hardy Boys (The Hardy Boys)
- Nancy Drew (Nancy Drew)
- Film characters
- Jabba the Hutt (Star Wars)
- Jack Sparrow (Pirates of the Caribbean)
- Jason Voorhees (Friday the 13th)
- Khan Noonien Singh (Star Trek)
- Palpatine (Star Wars)
- TV characters
- Bernard Quatermass (Quatermass)
- Characters of Carnivàle
- Martin Keamy (Lost)
- Michael Tritter (House, M.D.)
- Pauline Fowler (EastEnders)
- Comic book characters
- Anarky (DC Comics)
- Batman (DC Comics)
- Captain Marvel (DC Comics)
- Superman (DC Comics)
- Cartoon characters
- Bart Simpson (The Simpsons)
- Homer Simpson (The Simpsons)
- List of Naruto characters
- Sideshow Bob (The Simpsons)
- Troy McClure (The Simpsons)
- List of Tokyo Mew Mew characters
- Video game characters
- Characters of Final Fantasy VIII
- Cortana (Halo)
- List of characters in Castlevania: Aria of Sorrow and Dawn of Sorrow
- Master Chief (Halo)
- Elements of fictional works
- Dalek (Doctor Who species)
- Dunder Mifflin (The Office company)
- Flood (Halo) (Halo species)
- TARDIS (Doctor Who time machine)
- Three Laws of Robotics (fictional ethics)
Templates
{{In-universe}}
If you notice an article that predominantly describes a fictional topic from an in-universe perspective, or even provides no indication that a fictional subject is fictional, preferably rewrite the article or section yourself, or use the {{In-universe}} template to bring the issue to the attention of others. Be sure to leave a note on the article's talk page explaining your objections. The template looks like this:
This article describes a work or element of fiction in a primarily in-universe style. |
{{Cleanup-tense}}
One of the most frequently occurring errors associated with an in-universe style of writing is incorrect use of past tense when discussing elements of the plot. Works of fiction are generally considered to "come alive" when read. As with all other article issues, preferably fix it yourself, or alternatively you may use the template to supplement and specify the {{In-universe}} template's call for a consistent real-world perspective.
This article may use tenses incorrectly. |
{{Primarysources}}
If you notice an article featuring only primary sources and sources affiliated with the subject, preferably find and add suitable sources yourself, or use the {{Primarysources}} template to bring the issue to the attention of others.
This article relies excessively on references to primary sources. |
{{Plot}}
A plot summary should be succinct and focused on the main plot. What to cut can sometimes be a difficult decision. If you have the time and energy, please consider tightening overly long and overly detailed plot summaries yourself. Alternatively, use the template:
This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. |
{{All plot}}
If you come across an article which consists entirely or almost entirely of a plot summary, you may use the {{All plot}} template to raise the issue. Since this is a crucial article issue which may eventually lead to the article being nominated for deletion, consider improving the article yourself.
This article consists almost entirely of a plot summary. |
{{No plot}}
Conversely, the {{No plot}} template can be used in the rather untypical case that a plot summary is missing from an article. If you feel qualified to write a basic plot summary, consider giving it a shot. Succinctly summarizing a plot and deciding which elements to mention and how to describe and weight them can be a challenge, but it's also a rewarding experience; plot summaries can be entirely based on primary sources and in many cases no complicated cross-reading between various sources is required.
This article needs a plot summary. |
Alternative outlets for fictional universe articles
Some other Wikipedia-like projects prefer the in-universe perspective. These provide a good alternative for editors interested in writing as fans, for fans. The following is a partial list:
- 24 Wikia—Describes the universe of the 24 television show.
- Alphanex—A wiki concerning the Marvel Comics team Alpha Flight
- James Cameron's Avatar—at Wikia
- Battlestar Wiki—A Battlestar Galactica-related encyclopedia.
- Buffyverse Wiki—A wiki dedicated to the fictional universe of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and its spin-offs.
- Bulbapedia—Describes the Pokémon universe.
- Comixpedia's Webcomic Encyclopedia—A wiki about webcomics.
- DC Database—An unofficial DC Comics wiki.
- DC Animated Universe Wiki—An unofficial DC animated universe wiki.
- Dragon Ball—A wiki about the Dragon Ball multiverse.
- Dungeons & Dragons and Dungeons & Dragons—wikis devoted to the Dungeons & Dragons game.
- Encyclopedia Gamia—A wiki about computer and video games, board, card and pen and paper games.
- Eragon—Eragon
- Family Guy wiki—Family Guy
- Final Fantasy—A wiki dedicated to the Final Fantasy franchise.
- GameWikis—Community fansite/wiki for several computer games such as: Guild Wars and The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion and Warhammer Online.
- Greyhawk wiki—a wiki devoted to the world of Greyhawk.
- Harry Potter wiki—a wiki devoted to the Harry Potter universe
- Heroes Wiki—a wiki devoted to Heroes universe
- The Infosphere—A Futurama wiki.
- Lostpedia—A wiki dedicated to the Lost universe.
- Marvel Database—An unofficial Marvel Comics wiki.
- Marvel Universe—The official Marvel Comics wiki.
- Memory Alpha—Describes the Star Trek universe.
- Pro Wrestling Wikia—Professional wrestling wiki
- RuneScape Wiki—A wiki devoted to the MMORPG RuneScape.
- SimpsonsWiki—A Simpsons-related wiki.
- SmashWiki—A Super Smash Bros. wiki
- Transformers Wiki—A wiki dedicated to the Transformers toylines, cartoon series, comics and movies.
- Tenchi in Tokyo—A wiki dedicated to the Tenchi anime series.
- Tolkien Gateway—A wiki dedicated to J.R.R. Tolkien and his works.
- The TV IV—A user-edited compedium of television knowledge.
- The Unofficial Elder Scrolls Pages—A wiki dedicated to The Elder Scrolls series.
- Sonic Retro—A wiki dedicated to the Sonic the Hedgehog franchise.
- Wookieepedia—Describes the Star Wars universe.
- WoWWiki—A wiki for the World of Warcraft videogame.
Infoboxes and succession boxes
Infoboxes, usually placed in the upper-right portion of an article, give key data about the article's subject in tabular format. For entities within fiction, useful infobox data might include the creators or actors, first appearance, an image, and in-universe information essential to understanding the entity's context in the overall fiction. What qualifies as essential varies based on the nature of the work. Where facts change at different points in a story or series, there may be no appropriate in-universe information at all to add. By contrast, an infobox on a character in a fantasy work with multiple warring factions may warrant data such as allegiance.
As with all infoboxes, trivial details should be avoided. An infobox for a real-life actor would not contain items such as favorite food and hobbies; these details do not aid the reader in understanding the important characteristics of the subject. In the same way, infoboxes about fictional entities should avoid delving into minutiae, such as information only mentioned in supplementary backstory. For this reason, infoboxes meant for real-world entities should not be applied to their fictional counterparts, since, for example, information important to a description of a real-world company may be tangential to a fictional one. It is important to identify the revenue of Microsoft, whereas the fact that fictional MegaAcmeCorp makes 300 billion GalactiBucks in 2463 is probably unimportant.
Another common type of template, succession boxes, should not be used to describe in-universe relationships in articles about fictional entities. Succession boxes assume continuity, which may not exist. Furthermore, they may invite the creation of non notable articles that fall under the fictional succession. For articles about works of fiction themselves, the story that each work of fiction depicts does not change despite the continuation of stories across serial works or sequels, and as a consequence, the events within one work of fiction are always in the present whenever it is read, watched, or listened to. In-universe temporal designations such as "current" or "previous" are therefore inappropriate. For character articles (which cannot be bound temporally), it may be acceptable to use customized templates to summarize information from the perspective of the real world, such as connections between articles describing the same fictional world. Such templates should not invite the creation of articles about non-notable subjects.
See also
- Wikipedia:Fancruft
- Wikipedia:Guide to writing better articles#Check your fiction
- Wikipedia:Naming conventions:
- Wikipedia:Notability (fiction)
- Wikipedia:WikiProject Novels/Style guidelines
- Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate collection of information (No. 2, Plot summaries)
Related WikiProjects
These are some of the more important WikiProjects that deal with fiction material. They may have additional suggestions, article templates and styles that you might wish to make yourself familiar with.