Forum:Queen Victoria and other honourifics

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Revision as of 19:53, 7 August 2023 by NateBumber (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Forumheader|The Panopticon}} <!-- Please put your content under this line. Be sure to sign your edits with four tildes ~~~~ --> == Opening post == === Introduction === Recently, Forum:Relaxing T:HONOUR asked whether we should reform the character naming policy on this wiki. Over the course of the thread, a large number of poorly named pages were identified. The conclusion strongly reaffirmed the "Doc Holliday precedent", referring to my argument on Talk:Doc Holl...")
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Opening post

Introduction

Recently, Forum:Relaxing T:HONOUR asked whether we should reform the character naming policy on this wiki. Over the course of the thread, a large number of poorly named pages were identified. The conclusion strongly reaffirmed the "Doc Holliday precedent", referring to my argument on Talk:Doc Holliday that sometimes an apparent honourific is actually part of a nickname and therefore belongs in the page title. Indeed, a stronger application of this principle has solved many longstanding issues, such as moving Brian (The Guide to the Dark Times) to Brian the Ood. However, there are many problematic cases that the Doc Holliday precedent doesn't solve.

A paradigmatic example is Queen Victoria. What should we call her page?

How have other wikis and encyclopedias handled this difficulty? Well, Wikipedia's page for her is called Queen Victoria. The World History Encyclopedia's page is called Queen Victoria. Encyclopedia.org's entry is called Victoria, Queen (in the same way that Elvis' is Presley, Elvis). This should serve as a prompt for further thought: not because we should blindly copy other sites, but because when there's a common-sense solution which our rules are stopping us from using, that's a prompt for us to look at our rules more closely.

Proposal

My proposal is a "Queen Victoria precedent".

  1. When there is a need to disambiguate a character page title;
  2. When the story title is insufficient as a dab term, either because it is unclear or actively misleading (see below);
  3. When primary topic status is not merited; and
  4. When the character is always associated with a single title or honourific, which would serve to disambiguate them from others

– then we can add that title to their page title as a disambiguation term.

I believe these clauses are mostly self-explanatory, but let's explore some of them.

When the story title is insufficient as a dab term

What makes a story title insufficient as a dab term? Ultimately, that's for a talk page to decide. But there are a few broad categories.

Sometimes, the story dab would imply things that aren't true, like in the Queen Victoria example above. (She was not a character created by Christopher Bulis for Imperial Moon!)

Sometimes, the story dab would be unhelpful. For instance, Sarah-Jane's Aunt Lavinia was mentioned on TV several times before she actually appeared. If that first appearance had been an obscure short story, it would have been very confusing to our readers if we called her page Lavinia (obscure short story). The Queen Victoria precedent would let us call her Aunt Lavinia instead. (Thankfully, we know her last name, so we're spared the headache!)

Sometimes, the story dab won't be unique. For instance, we meet Mrs. Maitland in The Bells of Saint John, but we also meet other members of her family, so Maitland (The Bells of Saint John) would be ambiguous. Instead we call her Mrs. Maitland, as T:HONOUR already prescribes:

"It's clearer to just use her honourific to title the article."Tardis:Honourifics

As you can see, we have already practiced the "Queen Victoria precedent" against unhelpful dab terms for years. This proposal would merely extend existing practice to other examples of unehlpful dab terms as well.

When the character is always associated with a single title or honourific

User:Scrooge MacDuck alluded to this in his closing statement in the last thread, and his example was Justine. In the vast majority of stories in which she appears, she is called "Cousin Justine". However, at times we also see her as "Little Sister Justine", (before she joins the Faction and abandons her surname) "Justine McManus", and (perhaps) "Mother Justine". There is no reason to privilege one era of her life over another in our coverage.

However, in other cases, a character's title or honourific is the opposite of transitory: it's actively treated as a part of their name. A classic example often cited by OttselSpy25 is Miss Young, whom we cover on Young (The Sea Devil) despite the fact that she is never called "Young" but always "Miss Young", both in the covered stories and the ample secondary literature about her use and creation. If the other conditions are met, "Miss" should be included in the title for her character page.

Conclusion

I've intentionally avoided citing too many use cases lest we get bogged down in the details of individual title proposals. Whether any individual page title meets these criteria should be left for the relevant talk page(s); the purpose of this discussion is simply to set out a framework for those talk page discussions.

Let me close with another quote from the first lines of T:HONOUR:

Don't include Mr, Mrs, Dr, or any other honourific in a page title — unless it's genuinely a part of a character's name. […] These should generally not be included in article titles, unless they provide the only reasonable means of disambiguation.Tardis:Honourifics

The actual wording of T:HONOUR has always left the door open for exceptions, but for too long we've treated it as a hard rule that can be applied blindly. Fixing Doc Holliday established a precedent that cleaned up dozens of pages in the process. Let's fix Victoria and establish another. – n8 () 19:52, 7 August 2023 (UTC)

Discussion

to be added