Form:Censorship incident: Difference between revisions
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| {{{field|medium| input type=checkboxes| values = Commercial Advertising, Dance, Design, Electronic Media | | {{{field|medium| input type=checkboxes| values = Commercial Advertising, Dance, Design, Electronic Media, Film Video, Installation, Internet, Literature, Mixed Media, Music, Painting, Performance Art, Public Art, Personal Opinion, Photography, Print Journalism, Public Speech, Radio, Sculpture, Television, Textbook, Theatre}}} | ||
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Revision as of 17:40, 15 November 2016
This is the beginning of the "Censorship Incident" form. You can use this form to create a new article page about a censorship case.
First Time Adding a Case?
- Make sure you are logged in or Request an Account.
- Learn some wiki basics and our Censorpedia article guidelines.
- And you might want search Censorpedia to make sure a page on your case does not already exist.
Ready To Start?
- To begin your new page, enter your title below (if a page with that name already exists, you will be sent to a form to edit that page)
- Remember to name your case. For most cases, the page should be named after the title of the censored 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 (without quotes) 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 the Free Text box box of the Censorship incident Form when the title should appear in italics, in accordance with commonly accepted manuals of style
- If an entire show was banned, or more than one work from the show or exhibit, use the title of the exhibit. If only a single work was rejected, use the title of the work
- If a work doesn't have a title (or the title is impossible to find), and was not part of an exhibit with a title, use the name of the artist
- If a work has no title, was not part of an entitled exhibit, and had many creators –such as with a community mural– make a title out of the location and medium (e.g. "West Side High School Mural (Plainesville, OH)")
- Check out our full NAMING GUIDELINES for details and exceptions.