Ontology:P132
Appearance
- crossed over with [Item]
Core characteristics
- item type
- pronounced [P] label [string] (L)
- crossed over with [Item]
- pronounced [P] alias (en) [string]
- --
- shares thematic block [Item] (BB) 11 -1 -
- --
- field, scope, or group [Item]
- Property data type
- item
- data Entity 11 -1 -
Examples
Prototype notes
- not continuous with -> example: mainstream Marxism-Leninism - not continuous with - Trotskyism; Dragon Ball GT - not continuous with - Dragon Ball Super; New Testament - not continuous with - Quran
- continuous with / work is continuous with / series continuous with / philosophical tradition continuous with -> serious canonicity relationship between two individual works or a work and containing series. does not immediately imply reverse relationship; if fan works are represented in Items, this should be used asymmetrically on the fan creation only. open question: should this be used for non-fiction works? I feel like the answer is yes precisely when they follow from an existing theoretical work in exactly the same way a fictional derivative work does, presuming previous works to be part of them. this allows easily coding the otherwise complex relationship that the collected works of Lenin are "canon" to Trotskyism without the faction of people immediately connected to Lenin actually approving of that. however this should not be used across the boundary between fiction and non-fiction unless it is meant to imply that the fictional work takes place inside a version of real-world history. sometimes this is the case. you can legitimately put some very funny inferences on the Fantastic Beasts entry although these would not belong directly on main-series Harry Potter entries.
- crossed over with / work has crossed over with -> to both discourage and encourage that ridiculous form of fan theory creation where people take crossovers seriously for no particular reason. don't conflate this with "work is continuous with". do put all the sillier connections in here.