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"Head canon" is an oxymoron!


Brony Number 42

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I hate when people use words incorrectly. The term "head canon" does not make any sense. "Canon" does not mean "back story." The word "canon" is used in the religious context to basically mean official. Using the term for fiction, such as a television show, means that something is officially recognized by the owner of the intellectual property. The only people who have the authority to make something canon are people who own the product, or who have been officially licensed to produce material for the product.

 

Anything created by fans that has not been officially sanctioned by the owners of the intellectual property is merely "fan fiction." Therefore, anything you come up with on your own cannot be canon. However, people use the term "head canon" when they should say "head back story." That term doesn't have the same ring to it, so perhaps a different term is more appropriate. Maybe something like "fan back story." In any case, canon does not mean back story. Stop using the word incorrectly.

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"Fan fiction" and "headcanon" aren't one of the same. Fan fiction deals specifically with the writing of said materials in the form of a story. A headcanon is defined as "Elements and interpretations of a fictional universe accepted by an individual fan, but not found within or supported by the official canon."

 

"Headcanon" is about a specific idea or concept from one's mind upon reading a specific product's canon, backstory or otherwise. It's not official canon, but an idea from an individual's point of view that could be woven into the canon personally. It has nothing to do with "backstory," but headcanon can be used for specific backstories because the individual is blending an idea into the canon, whether it's in fan fiction, fan art, music, analysis, debate, or any other form of art. So, no, "headcanon" isn't used incorrectly.

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The word canon means official. Head canon is like saying unofficial official. If you make up something about an official product, it is not canon. It is only canon if it is recognized by the owners of the property. As I said, we need a different term for it. But it is not canon, by definition.

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Except "headcanon" is defined as a concept or interpretation that the person's mind can accept as canon. Canon in his or her head/conscience/mind alone. That's been the definition for years, and claiming to need a new term now is completely foolish.

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You have problems with slang, jargon, and idiom in general, don't you? :)

 

Canon meaning the official lore for a fictional work is a modern usage that would be considered a jargon term, first used in this meaning with reference to Sherlock Homes back in 1911.

 

It's 'jargon' because it's a technical term only used by 'insiders' (i.e. fans) Outside of fandoms the word 'canon' means a body of religious law. :)

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I have a problem with improper use of language. If canon can mean something unofficial then it is meaningless. Anybody can make up a story for an existing franchise and it is canon? Tell me, then, what word do you use to describe something that IS officially licensed? Official canon? Then in a few years we will have the term "official head canon."

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'Headcanon' has been around for about fifty years, first mentioned in a Star Trek fanzine if I remember correctly. The term is older than you are. :)

 

Improper use of language is nonsense. Words change meaning constantly in every living language, that's why it's a living language and not a dead one like Latin. Slang, colloquialisms, jargon, idiom, are all ways the language changes over time. Heck, if I actually switched to using original English, the language Beowulf was written in, you wouldn't even be able to recognize that it's English. :)

 

"When I use a word," Humpty Dumpty said in rather a scornful tone, "it means just what I choose it to mean -- neither more nor less."

"The question is," said Alice, "whether you can make words mean so many different things."

"The question is," said Humpty Dumpty, "which is to be master - - that's all."

- Through the Looking Glass

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