Retcon
Retroactive continuity â€" commonly contracted to the
portmanteau retcon â€" is the adding of new information to "historical" material, or deliberately changing previously established facts in a work of
serial fiction. The change itself is referred to as a "retcon", and the act of writing and publishing a retcon is called "retconning".
Retcons are common in
comic books, especially those of large publishing houses such as
Marvel Comics and
DC Comics, because of the lengthy history of many series and the number of independent authors contributing to their development; this is the context in which the term was coined. Retconning also occurs in
TV shows,
movie sequels,
video games,
radio series, series of
novels, and can be done in any other type of episodic fiction. It is also used in
roleplaying, when the
game master feels it is needed to maintain consistency in the story or to fix significant mistakes that were missed during play.
The term "retroactive continuity" was popularized by comic book writer
Roy Thomas in his 1980s series
All-Star Squadron, which featured the
DC Comics superheroes of the 1940s. The earliest known use of the term is from Thomas' letter column in
All-Star Squadron #20 (April 1983), where Thomas wrote that he heard it at a convention. The term was shortened to "retcon" by Damian Cugley in 1988 on
USENET to describe a development in the comic book
Swamp Thing, in which
Alan Moore reinterpreted the events of the title character's origin.
Although there is considerable ambiguity and overlap between different kinds of retcons, there are some distinctions that can be made between different types of retcons, depending on whether they add to, alter, or remove material from past continuity. These distinctions often evoke different reactions from fans of the material.
Addition
Some retcons do not directly contradict previously established facts, but "fill in" missing background details, usually to support current plot points. This was the sense in which Thomas used
"retroactive continuity", as a purely additive process that did not "undo" any previous work, a common theme in his work on
All-Star Squadron.
Kurt Busiek took a similar approach with
Untold Tales of Spider-Man, a series which told stories that specifically fit between issues of the original
Amazing Spider-Man series, sometimes explaining discontinuities between those earlier stories. Yet another retroactive continuity book was
X-Men: The Hidden Years. Another example is the
Backstory of
The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past, expanded with great detail on his
prequel,
The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time.
Related to this is the concept of
shadow history or
secret history, in which the events of a story occur within the bounds of already-established events (especially real-world historical events), revealing a different interpretation of (or motivation for) the events. Some of
Tim Powers novels are examples of this, such as
Last Call, which suggests that
Bugsy Siegel's actions were due to his being a modern-day
Fisher King.
Alan Moore's additional information about the Swamp Thing's origins didn't contradict or change any of the events depicted in the character's previous appearances, but changed the underlying interpretation of them. This verges on making alterations to past continuity.
Alteration
This kind of retcon often adds information that effectively states "what you saw isn't what really happened" and then introduces a different version. This is usually interpreted by the audience as an overt change rather than a mere addition. The most common form this takes is when a character shown to have died (sometimes explicitly) is later revealed to have survived somehow. This is well known in
horror films, which may end with the death of the monster, but when the film becomes successful, the studio plans a sequel, revealing that the monster survived after all. The technique has been used so frequently in
superhero comics that the term
comic book death has been coined for it. The first famous example in popular culture is the return of
Sherlock Holmes: writer
Arthur Conan Doyle killed off the popular character in an encounter with his foe
Professor Moriarty, only to bring Holmes back, due in large part to audience response.
It is commonplace for characters to remain the same age, or to age out of synch with real time; this can be considered an ongoing implicit retcon of their birthdate. When historical events are involved in their biography, overt retcons may be used to accommodate this; a character who served in the army during
World War II might have his service record retconned to place him in the
Korean War, the
Vietnam War, the
Gulf War, etc. This is similar to a problem faced by many works of
future history: the events they describe happening in years after the initial publication do not conform to history as it actually happens. To accommodate such discrepancies, retcons may be used in later stories, altering dates or other details. (See
Star Trek examples, below.)
While retconning is usually done without comment by the creators, DC Comics has on rare occasions promoted special events dedicated to revising the history of the DC Comics universe. The most important and well known such event was the
mini-series Crisis on Infinite Earths; this allowed for wholesale revisions of their entire
multiverse of characters. It has been argued that these were not true retcons, however, because the cause of the changes to their universe actually appeared within the story, similar to stories in which a
time traveler goes to the past and changes history from how he remembered it.
Subtraction
Sometimes retconned alterations are so drastic as to render prior stories untenable. Many of the retcons introduced in
Crisis on Infinite Earths and DC's later
Zero Hour were specifically intended to wipe the slate clean, and permit an entirely new history to be written for the characters. This is commonly referred to as a
reboot. This is often very unpopular, upsetting fans of the material that has been removed from continuity.
Unpopular or embarrassing stories are sometimes later ignored by publishers, never referred to again, and effectively erased from a series' continuity. They may publish stories that contradict the previous story or explicitly establish that it "never happened". Likewise, an unpopular retcon may even be re-retconned away. A good example of this type is the
Star Trek: Voyager episode "
Threshold" in which
Tom Paris breaks the
Warp 10 threshold and undergoes bizarre changes; the episode was deemed non-canon by
Brannon Braga and has never been referred to in the series again.
Another famous example is
Star Wars. In the movie
Return of the Jedi, it appears that the character
Boba Fett has suffered a horrible (and humiliating) death in the belly of the
Sarlacc. However, Boba Fett is depicted as surviving the whole ordeal by rocketing out of the pit later in books, graphic novels, and even in a Star Wars Unleashed
action figure. To date not even the various forms of media can agree on how exactly Fett escaped the pit, or whether he even escaped at all.
Fans may use
Krypto-revisionism to ignore a particular retcon, itself a form of
meta-retcon stating that "it was never published". Similarly, fans may invent unofficial explanations for inconsistencies, the challenge itself becoming a source of entertainment. (See
Fanon,
Soap Opera Rapid Aging Syndrome.)
Retroactive continuity is similar to, but not the same as, plot inconsistencies introduced accidentally or through lack of concern for continuity; retconning is done deliberately. For example, the ongoing continuity contradictions on episodic TV series such as
The Golden Girls reflects very loose continuity, not genuine retcons. However, in series with generally tight continuity, retcons are sometimes created after the fact to explain continuity errors. Retconning is also generally distinct from replacing the actor who plays a part in an ongoing series, which is more properly an example of loose continuity (i.e. the different appearance of the character is ignored), rather than retroactively changing past continuity (See
Darrin Syndrome).
Retconning is also distinct from direct revision; when
George Lucas re-edited the original
Star Wars trilogy, he made changes directly to the source material, rather than introducing new source material that contradicted the contents of previous material. However, the later series of Star Wars prequels did qualify as "new source material", and many fans have pointed out instances that apparently retcon elements of the original trilogy (See below).
The "clean slate" reinterpretation of characters - as in movie and television adaptations of books, or the reintroduction of many superheroes in the
Silver Age of Comics - is similar to a reboot retcon, except that the previous versions are not explicitly or implicitly eliminated in the process. These are merely alternate or parallel reinterpretations.
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List of retcons*
Back-story*
Canon*
Prequel*
Reboot*
Fanon*
Fanwankery*
Jumping the shark*
Spin-off