Subject: The distinction is...
Author:
Posted on: 2013-05-22 21:52:00 UTC

That the Star Wars Expanded Universe and the video game novels are meant to be canon or sub-canon since the very beginning. Their authors are choosen or at least accepted by the owners of the rights.

(Some of those works, though, are apparently in dire need of a sporking - I heard that the Mass Effect novelization was a disaster. But for those there are other sporking means, such as MSTs.)

The "problem" with Kindle Worlds is in their status: "published fanfiction"

They are sold, but they're fanfiction. The work of a single fan, that goes unchecked until it is sent to Amazon for publishing.

Tell me, what would be the difference between this and FF.net if they actually enforced the latter's rules about quality?

That we pay for one, and not for the other.

Now, if Fanfiction.net started making the users pay to read the fanfics on it, would that mean that all of those instantly become "published canons"?

No. Because they're still fanfiction.

If an author decided to collect the best fanfictions about his work(obviously with their authors' consent) and publish an anthology, would it be a "published canon"?

No, because it would be a published anthology of fanfiction.
That is, unless the original work's author specifies that he considers the plot of those canon or an existing alternate universe (sub-canon). Only then it would be out of PPC jurisdiction, IMHO.

The point I want to bring home is: publishing alone doesn't make a fanfiction into canon or a subcanon.


I can be missing some distinction somewhere, though, so feel free to point out any flaws in my reasoning.

Reply Return to messages