Censorpedia:FixFR: Difference between revisions
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** If the work is particularly obscure (having few or no significant hits on Google) and has a short and non-descript name, append (''medium'') to the title where ''medium'' indicates if the work is a book, film, TV show, etc | ** If the work is particularly obscure (having few or no significant hits on Google) and has a short and non-descript name, append (''medium'') to the title where ''medium'' indicates if the work is a book, film, TV show, etc | ||
** All instances of censorship of a work should be listed on that work's article page. | ** All instances of censorship of a work should be listed on that work's article page. | ||
** Add <nowiki>{{DISPLAYTITLE:<span style="font-style: italic;">Title Of Article</span>}}</nowiki> in page bodies when the title should appear in italics, in accordance with commonly accepted manuals of style | ** Add '''<nowiki>{{DISPLAYTITLE:<span style="font-style: italic;">Title Of Article</span>}}</nowiki>''' in page bodies when the title should appear in italics, in accordance with commonly accepted manuals of style | ||
* The title of a show or exhibit, if the entire show was banned (rather than a specific work) | * The title of a show or exhibit, if the entire show was banned (rather than a specific work) | ||
* The title of a legislative bill passed to censor or otherwise restrict speech, appending (legislation, ''Country, State, City'') where applicable | * The title of a legislative bill passed to censor or otherwise restrict speech, appending (legislation, ''Country, State, City'') where applicable |
Revision as of 15:30, 22 July 2011
Titles
Articles and their titles are conceptually anchored, whenever possible, to the censored material. The following hierarchy should be used for choosing an article title:
- The title of the work
- If the work is particularly obscure (having few or no significant hits on Google) and has a short and non-descript name, append (medium) to the title where medium indicates if the work is a book, film, TV show, etc
- All instances of censorship of a work should be listed on that work's article page.
- Add {{DISPLAYTITLE:<span style="font-style: italic;">Title Of Article</span>}} in page bodies when the title should appear in italics, in accordance with commonly accepted manuals of style
- The title of a show or exhibit, if the entire show was banned (rather than a specific work)
- The title of a legislative bill passed to censor or otherwise restrict speech, appending (legislation, Country, State, City) where applicable
- The title of a literary or artistic movement, where a pattern of censorship of works is apparent. Individual works within the movement should be censored as well
- The name of a creator who has been subject to repeated censorship
- Each of the creator's works that has been subject to censorship should have a page
- The creator should have both a page and a category
Dates
The schema imported from The File Room dates censorship incidents using an irregular timeline. Adjust the date to the year the incident(s) began. In the Category Tags for the article, include tags for the year, decade and century of the incidents listed on the page.
Categories
Dozens of categories have been automatically created from The File Room import. Now we must create hierarchies of categories, and adjust, add, and edit categories as necessary.
Where to Find Categories
Category pages can be found by going to the address http://wiki.ncac.org/Category:Example where Example is the name of the category.
To see a list of all categories, go to http://wiki.ncac.org/Special:Categories
Including a Page In a Category
For an article to be "found" by its category, place [[Category:Example]] in body of the article.
An article with the tag [[Category:1996]] will be listed in the category for that year.
Category Hierarchies
Categories can have multiple sub-categories. When a category page includes the tag of another category, it becomes a "child" of the tagged category.
Example Sub-Category
By placing the tag [[Category:1990s]] in the category page of [[Category:1996]], then 1996 becomes a sub-category of 1990s. Likewise, 1990s should be designated a subcategory of 1900s.
An article including an incident occurring in 1996 should include category tags for 1996, 1990s, and 1900s.