Category:Writers from the real world: Difference between revisions
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'''Writers from the real world''' is an in-universe category which seeks to organise those people who exist in both the [[DWU]] and the real world. | |||
This category is not for the writers of ''Doctor Who'' fiction. There are a variety of other categories for them, such as [[:category:real world writers]]. | |||
{{FTRW}} | {{FTRW}} | ||
[[ | [[Category:Human writers]] | ||
[[ | [[Category:People from the real world]] |
Latest revision as of 22:13, 19 November 2012
Writers from the real world is an in-universe category which seeks to organise those people who exist in both the DWU and the real world.
This category is not for the writers of Doctor Who fiction. There are a variety of other categories for them, such as category:real world writers.
Writing " . . . from the real world" articles
Writers from the real world is a member of a category that organizes things within Doctor Who universe. As such it (or, if a subcategory, articles within it) must be written from that point of view. Care must be taken with articles or subcategories like this to ensure that we stress only what is known within the DWU.
Main body of article
Please remember that the main parts of articles within a DWU category should only give information that is actually provided in the story or stories concerned. For instance, an article about a song from the real world shouldn't state the writers of that song, its highest UK chart position or, generally, the year in which it debuted. Almost never is such information provided in a DWU source. Likewise, people from the real world usually are not given full birth and death dates or detailed career information in a DWU story. We don't know from a DWU source, for instance, even what the dates of Margaret Thatcher's prime ministership were. They could be different from that which obtained in the real world, especially given the presence of strictly fictional prime ministers, like Harriet Jones. While copying Wikipedia articles is not forbidden by our Manual of Style, it should be strictly avoided for subjects within the " . . . from the real world" categories. Limit yourself to only that information which can be seen or heard from the story concerned. Remember, all these articles will have a wikipediainfo link, anyway, allowing readers to easily access Wikipedia, if they so choose.
Behind-the-scenes sections
"Common knowledge" about subjects like these should only be given in the behind the scenes section, or, if brief, in an italicized section beneath the article proper. Information given in the behind-the-scenes section should be limited to only what is relevant to amplify the meaning of the main part of the article. For instance, the real world hosts of the television programme, What Not to Wear are relevant to the DWU article, because those presenters provided the voices of the hosts in the DWU version of What Not to Wear seen in Bad Wolf. However, their names should not be given in the main body of the article, because that fact is not established by the episode. Instead, the information is best included in the behind-the-scenes section. By contrast, Orlando Bloom's involvement in The Lord of the Rings and The Pirates of the Caribbean is completely irrelevant to the DWU — until and unless either of those facts are established by the DWU or he participates in a DWU production — and shouldn't be included in the behind-the-scenes section.
The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 332 total.
(previous page) (next page)A
B
- Bob Baker (in-universe)
- Bob Baker (The Girl Who Loved Doctor Who)
- James Baldwin
- Matteo Bandello
- Iain M. Banks
- Clive Barker
- J. M. Barrie
- L. Frank Baum
- Samuel Beckett
- Aphra Behn
- Cyrano de Bergerac
- Ambrose Bierce
- David Bishop
- Jayce Black (in-universe)
- William Blake
- Enid Blyton
- Jorge Luis Borges
- Ray Bradbury
- Max Brod
- Jacob Bronowski
- Anne Brontë
- Charlotte Brontë
- Emily Brontë
- Mikhail Bulgakov
- Jeremy Burnham
- Robert Burns
- Christopher Burr
- Edgar Rice Burroughs
- William Burroughs
- Lawrence Burton (in-universe)
- Richard Francis Burton
- Tim Burton
- George Gordon Byron
C
- Karel Capek
- Frank Capra
- Neville Cardus
- Jimmy Carr (in-universe)
- John Dickson Carr
- Lewis Carroll
- Angela Carter
- Barbara Cartland
- Giacomo Casanova
- Miguel de Cervantes
- Owen Chadwick
- Raymond Chandler
- Geoffrey Chaucer
- Francis James Child
- Agatha Christie
- Winston Churchill
- Arthur C. Clarke
- Joanna Cole
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- Jackie Collins
- Wilkie Collins
- Catherine Cookson
- Paul Cornell (in-universe)
- Noël Coward
- Fanny Craddock
- Michael Crichton
- Edmund Crispin
- Clive Cussler
D
- Roald Dahl
- Petter Dass
- Russell T Davies (in-universe)
- Gerry Davis (The Girl Who Loved Doctor Who)
- Vivant Denon
- Philip K. Dick
- Charles Dickens
- Emily Dickinson
- Terrance Dicks (in-universe)
- Benjamin Disraeli
- Ignatius Donnelly
- Fyodor Dostoevsky
- Alfred Douglas
- Stuart Douglas (in-universe)
- Gary Downie (in-universe)
- Arthur Conan Doyle
- Alexandre Dumas
E
F
G
- Neil Gaiman (in-universe)
- Cate Gardner (in-universe)
- Julie Gardner (in-universe)
- Elizabeth Gaskell
- Geoffrey of Monmouth
- Ricky Gervais (in-universe)
- William Gibson
- Gilbert and Sullivan
- William Godwin
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
- Oliver Goldsmith
- Goscinny
- Kenneth Grahame
- Winston Graham
- Graham Greene
- Robert Greene
- Germaine Greer
- Brothers Grimm
- Matt Groening
- Simon Guerrier (in-universe)
H
- Henry Rider Haggard
- Kelly Hale (in-universe)
- Alexander Hamilton
- Frank Hampson
- Thomas Hardy (author)
- Ray Harryhausen
- Robert A. Heinlein
- Joseph Heller
- Héloïse
- Ernest Hemingway
- Robert Henrysoun
- James Herbert
- Andrew Hickey (in-universe)
- Craig Hinton (in-universe)
- Ian Hislop
- Lizzie Hopley (in-universe)
- James Hornby (in-universe)
- Victor Hugo
- Aldous Huxley