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Saturday, May 21st, 2011 04:58 pm
The Fanlore wiki committee would like to thank everyone who's participated in our recent conversation about categories and anime / manga / related fandoms. Several commentors on that thread sparked the following idea (especially branchandroot -- thanks, branchandroot!), and we'd like to know what you think about it.

The idea is this: what if we remove all of the format categories, and replace them with a flat, non-hierarchical list of fandom categories? Here's a visual representation of how things work now:

Graphic depicting the current system
[ Image Description: The "Fandoms by Source Text" category, encompassing both medium-based categories like "Film", "Real People", and "Gaming", and individual fandom categories like "Harry Potter" and "World of Warcraft". The "Fandoms By Source Community" category is unused. ]

Basically, we're rethinking how the category hierarchy for Fandoms by Source Text works. "Fandoms by Source Text" includes all fandoms that are focused on a single "text" or set of texts, like Final Fantasy, Jane Austen, or Brokeback Mountain. Currently, there are a number of "format" categories underneath the main "Fandoms by Source Text" category that we inherited from multifandom archive structure--these categories are not much used at all because a) the wiki isn't a fanfic archive and b) we now have categories for individual fandoms. Meanwhile, "Fandoms by Source Text" has a sibling category that is underused: Fandoms by Source Community, for fandoms that don't correspond neatly to a single canon text. Like Media Fandom, Anime & Manga Fandom, Filk, Vidding, J-pop, Manhwa, etc.

The restructuring plan has two parts:

1. Delete all of the format categories from Fandoms by Source Text, leaving a flat, non-hierarchical list of fandom categories.

2. Make better use of Fandoms by Source Community by moving the Anime, Manga, Real People, and Comics(?) categories there.

And then fans can make as many more fandom categories as they need, according to the naming conventions within their own communities. (We also recognize that some fannish traditions have arisen which don’t consider themselves part of an overall fannish culture; it’s not our intention to prescribe categories for those traditions, but rather to let those fan communities self-define as they will.)

Here's a visual aid for the proposed changes:

Graphic depicting the proposed system
[ Image Description: "Fandoms by Source Text" category now encompasses only fandom categories like "Coffee Prince" and "Blake’s 7". The "Fandoms by Source Community" category now has categories for things like "Media Fandom", "K-Drama", and "Gaming". These in turn also lead to individual fandom categories, e.g. "Media Fandom" leads to "Blake’s 7" and "Harry Potter" while "K-Drama" leads to "Coffee Prince". ]

(This is a rough sketch to illustrate how potential fandom categories might be linked to one another and is not intended to be complete or prescriptive.)

Categories to be deleted:
Books & Literature
Cartoons
Film
Games (?)
Radio
Television
Theater
(and "Real People" could be renamed or split into whatever categories people choose.)




Here are some examples for how wiki pages might be categorized according to the plan.

No fandom that has a fandom category needs to have a page categorized under Fandoms by Source Text. For example:

Category:Fandoms by Source Text
.....Category:Harry Potter
...........Harry Potter (the page)

So the page "Harry Potter" would get the Harry Potter category and no other category.

And:

Category:Fandoms by Source Text
.....Homestuck (the page)

The page "Homestuck" would get the Fandoms by Source Text category because there is no "Homestuck" category yet.

And:

Category:Fandoms by Source Text
.....Category:Naruto
.........Naruto (the page)

Category:Fandoms by Source Community
....Category:Anime & Manga
........Category:Naruto
.............Naruto (the page)

The page "Naruto" would get the Naruto category.

And:

Category:Fandoms by Source Text
.....Category:Blake's 7
.........Blake's 7 (the page)

Category:Fandoms by Source Community
.....Category:Media Fandom
.........Category:Blake's 7
.............Blake's 7 (the page)


The page "Blake's 7" would get the Blake's 7 category, but would no longer have a "Television" category. Each fandom category would be its own thing.




Would this proposed solution -- getting rid of format categories such as "Television" and "Film" and letting each fandom category (including "Anime & Manga," "Manhwa," etc) be its own thing -- work for you? We want your input; please tell us what you think!

(If there are no objections to the plan above, please feel free to start moving categories on May 28. If you need help with wiki stuff, please don’t hesitate to contact the gardeners for assistance or leave a comment to this post.)

EDIT June 23: See the revised proposal here
Saturday, May 21st, 2011 10:35 pm (UTC)
My concern was really whether RPF fits that definition. I suppose some does and some doesn't, but that might not be too helpful.

The wiki committee has just been talking about this, actually -- and we share your sense that some RPF fits this definition and some doesn't. For that matter, some fans whose activity centers around "real people" call what they're doing "RPF;" other fans don't.

The nice thing about this system is that fans can choose the categories they want to put on their pages, so fans from communities which identify with the RPF category can use that category, and fans who identify in some other way can create a category to encompass their way of self-identifying.

ut you would still find Harry Potter if you were looking in the "Fandoms by Source Text" category, right, because there would be the "Harry Potter" category in there?

Yes, definitely. The "Harry Potter" page would be listed in the "Fandoms by Source Text" category, and also in the "Media Fandom" category. Pages can have more than one category, so that's no problem.

So would Fanlore differentiate this, then, and put some book fandoms into the Media Fandom category and others not?

That would be up to Fanlore users, I think.
Saturday, May 21st, 2011 10:42 pm (UTC)
...fans can choose the categories they want to put on their pages...

If this is the line that the committee is taking, then doesn't it in a sense make the whole issue about how to categorize anime/manga fandoms rather simple? Some fandoms could use the old "Format" categories and some could use "Fandom by Source Community" categories and some could use both, depending on what suits the users/fans best.

I suppose I'm confused about where the line is drawn between top-down and bottom-up decisions about how the wiki is supposed to operate.
Saturday, May 21st, 2011 10:55 pm (UTC)
(Yes, I realized that typo as soon as I had posted the comment, but I can't seem to edit comments, so I couldn't fix it! Argh! Sorry!)
Sunday, May 22nd, 2011 05:08 am (UTC)
The nice thing about this system is that fans can choose the categories they want to put on their pages, so fans from communities which identify with the RPF category can use that category, and fans who identify in some other way can create a category to encompass their way of self-identifying.
What happens if fans disagree on which categories to put or not to put on a fandom?
(Anonymous)
Sunday, May 22nd, 2011 11:02 am (UTC)
That's what discussion pages are for.
Sunday, May 22nd, 2011 12:55 pm (UTC)
[personal profile] zebra_in_dream, I'm sure you're right that there will be situations in which fans disagree about which categories to use and not use. I'll echo anon here: in a case like this, a conversation would unfold on the Talk page where fans could argue in favor of whichever solution seemed right to them. And hopefully a consensus could be reached.

What the wiki committee doesn't want to do is dictate how fans self-identify. It's important to us that fans be able to choose the labels and categories that they want. And yeah, sometimes fans are going to disagree with each other. So we'll turn to the Talk page and let the fans in question talk it out.

It's not a perfect system, but the wiki committee would prefer the flaws of a system in which the decisions are up to fans (even if fans sometimes disagree) than the flaws of a system in which decisions are up to the wiki committee. :-) (I mean, we're fans too! but we're not fans of everything, and we're not experts on everything, by a long shot.)
Sunday, May 22nd, 2011 04:06 pm (UTC)
I think expecting a discussion and a consensus is a very idealistic view.
The probably more realistic situation is an edit war, uncivil discussions in various places and the call for people with administration rights to step in and protect the page in the desired version and ban the other side, possible stalking and interfering with what the other side does on marginally related and unrelated pages and even places outside of the fanlore.
Sunday, May 22nd, 2011 04:31 pm (UTC)
Ah, good to know there is something in place in case of trouble, the above kinda sounded like only sunshine and fluffy bunnies was expected.

(Wikipedia can make one really jaded on such things and to expect attack before civil discussion.)