WikiProject Star Trek was formed to foster the creation and improvement of Star Trek-related articles, and to establish guidelines for those articles. Its members endeavor to produce an authoritative reference on Star Trek materials (canon and non-canon), which is easy to read and has a consistent style. The goal is for our articles to live long and prosper.
And remember that, in the words of Benjamin Sisko, there's an old saying: Fortune favors the bold.
As per Disambiguation Guidelines, articles should only be disambiguated when the disambiguation is necessary. This is also true for articles on individual Star Trek episodes - the title of the article should be the name of the episode, disambiguated only if the name of the episode is ambiguous. "Spock's Brain," for example, is not disambiguated because "Spock's Brain" is not an ambiguous name. "Arena (Star Trek: The Original Series)" is disambiguated because there are other articles with the name "Arena". All disambiguation on Star Trek articles, when required, should conform to the naming convention of Title (Series).
For articles on individual Star Trek episodes, if no disambiguation is needed on the article title, a redirect should be created at the disambiguated title pointing to the actual article. For example, Spock's Brain is an episode article that requires no disambiguation. Therefore, Spock's Brain (TOS episode) has been created as a redirect to Spock's Brain.
Editors should keep in mind that Wikipedia is an out-of-universe source, all articles should take an out-of-universe perspective. All articles should also conform to Wikipedia's guidelines on writing about fiction.
A number of navigational templates have been created for Star Trek articles to make it easier for readers to view related articles. There should be at least one navigational template should be placed on everyStar Trek page. Please follow the guidelines detailed at Category: Star Trek templates for more specific information.
References
When referencing article information, remember to use reliable sources. Avoid using Star Trek episodes and films as references when possible, as they constitute primary sources.
Style and Format
The true name of first Star Trek series is properly Star Trek; to promote clarity, references to the original series should generally appear as the retronymStar Trek: The Original Series.
Use italics when describing the franchise, television series, films, or similar.
Since articles about fictional characters, places, events and objects should be written in an out-of-universe perspective, most of the issues regarding "canon vs non-canon" simply fall away, as no information should be presented as fact, and it all should be sourced. Canon status can inform the prominence and relevance of information. In brief, this is all television and film on-screen material.[1] Sources for canon information should be noted, ideally with context (was the information in dialogue, seen on-screen or was it from an Okudagram?). Editors are encouraged to not rely on the Encyclopedia's attribution of facts to the episodes and check for themselves, as the Encyclopedia does not always note when it is speculating. TLA/Es for each also appear. Paramount presently recognizes the Star Trek continuity as:
Where the remastered version of the original series differs from the older version both versions should be presented. New information (such as new ship models not depicted on the original version), should be explicitly cited to the remastered version.
Semi-canon
There is a body of officially licensed reference work produced by people who have directly worked on the various Star Trek shows and films. These are generally regarded as "true" except where they contradict new episodes. Such works are considered a grey area: the creative teams behind the various Star Trek television series and films are under no obligation to adhere to any conjecture or extrapolation offered in these works. (See individual entries for exceptions.)
According to The Star Trek Encyclopedia, Gene Roddenberry unsuccessfully attempted to have elements of the films Star Trek V: The Final Frontier and Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country declared apocryphal. This should be disregarded as Paramount Pictures has made no official statement. Speculation from Star Trek writers and backstories created for characters but never indicated on screen are not canon. Spellings of words found in scripts may be used.
Where information from these works is utilized in Wikipedia, a reference should always be noted, either in the References section. Where an article is portraying a mixture of information from various sources, it may be wise to attribute the information directly within the text.
Official website. The website includes substantial information taken from works such as the Chronology and Encyclopedia, leading to some confusion over canonical status. Paramount considers the website to be a print source, and (thus) is inline with the canonicity of other print references.
Backstage information:
Some information has been provided only through off-screen anecdotes, such as the names of various species seen in the Star Trek films, computer displays that are not legible to viewers, and the surname of Spock's mother. These are sometimes closer to fanon than official references. This information can come from official magazines and supplements, licensed trading cards (for example, Star Trek Customizable Card Game), and writer and production crew interviews.
Non-canon
While these works are beloved by fans and may commonly be regarded as fanon, they are not official, and if included should always be clearly attributed to their source, and not presented as "true" in the fictional universe.
Treatment of non-canon material within articles is a matter of judgement. It may be useful to consider non-canon material at length, especially if it influences later material, or was a matter of particular controversy (for example, Timeline of Star Trek describes several other timelines which put Okuda's timeline into a historical context), or Vulcan's moon. Much non-canon material is inconsistent with other non-canon material, so attempting to portray a consistent all-encompassing Star Trek Expanded Universe is problematic. In other cases, non-canon material may be better treated as a minor footnote, with a reference to the article about the non-canon work in question.
It is worth noting that this viewpoint is considered controversial by many fans, some of whom consider literary works to be superior to many examples of the televised and filmed Star Trek. The responsibility for deciding what is non-canon rests with Paramount Pictures, the owners of the Star Trek franchise.
It is often stated that the events of Star Trek: The Motion Picture were followed by a second five-year mission. Gene Roddenberry had planned to produce a new TV series in the late 1970s, and TMP was an expanded version of the original script for the first episode. However, since nothing was ever filmed, and no reference has ever been made on screen to a post-TMP mission, all references to Phase II or a second mission have to be considered non-canon. (Two scripts written for Phase II, "The Child" and "Devil's Due", were later used for TNG.) Note that the semi-canon Star Trek Chronology accepts the validity of the second five-year mission.
According to current editors at Pocket Books, no novels or other printed stories are considered canon by Paramount. This includes episode and film novelizations, the Deep Space Nine relaunch novels, and the Voyager novels "Pathways" and "Mosaic" (even though they were both written by the Voyager executive producer Jeri Taylor, and at one point were considered to be the only canon novels).
Several original audio adventures featuring Captain Hikaru Sulu and the crew of the USS Excelsior were produced in the 1990s by Simon & Schuster Audioworks, a company related to Pocket Books. These audio dramas are presently considered non-canon as they are generally categorized the same as the original novels.
Fan-created fiction, websites, films, games, and other materials are never considered to be canon, since there is no involvement of Paramount Pictures.
Likewise, the Star Fleet Universe and all associated content is also not canon.
diffhistBrian Thompson04:16−19Llew Mawrtalkcontribs(→top: Manually revert two factual inaccuracies introduced by IP editors: -"Former" as he was still the CEO on his death; Tyne and Wear is in NE England not "the Northeastern United States")Tags: Mobile editMobile app editAndroid app editApp select source