The Star Trek canon consists of the television series The Original Series, The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, Voyager, Enterprise, and the ten motion pictures based upon the series.
Paramount Pictures, owners of the Star Trek franchise, has maintained the definitions of canon since Roddenberry's death in 1991. This means that, while the writers of subsequent Star Trek TV and film productions were not forbidden from referring to concepts introduced in a non-canon source, they are also not obliged to consider any of them when developing storylines. This has led to many occasions in which official "canon" stories contradict "non-canon" stories, particularly those from the novels and comic books.
Further complicating the issue is exactly which version of a live action work is precisely canon. The Director's Cut DVD of The Wrath of Khan (ST2:TWOK) is a good example of this: this special edition and the TV version include scenes cut from the theatrical release which add significant background information, such as details about the family and backstory of Montgomery Scott. No official statement has been made on the issue, but the inclusion of said scenes during the regular course of any official version of source material means they are generally de facto canon. However, this does not apply to extra non-canon scenes that do not appear during the usual course of any official release; for example, various character scenes that were cut from Nemesis but later included on their DVDs.
Various official computer games based on Star Trek have been released – often by Paramount's sister firm Simon and Schuster – but these, too, are discontinuous from the canon.
No The Animated Series episode is considered canon; however, elements from the animated series have been introduced into canon by live-action episode writers, an example being the "Kaswahn" ritual mentioned in the episode "Yesteryear" which remained officially non-canonical until it was mentioned in a 2002 episode of Enterprise called "The Catwalk." The non-canon nature of TAS remains an area of controversy among fans as the series introduced several key pieces of backstory for the Trek universe, including details of Spock's childhood, and the identification of Robert April as the first captain of the Enterprise. Neither of these elements have as yet been officially introduced into canon.
There is similar ambiguity regarding licensed Star Trek trading cards and the related collectible card games.
Despite over 560 hours of canonical Star Trek produced after ST5:TFF, not a single reference to any of its events has ever been made in canonical on-screen Star Trek since then. In fact, some later works outright contradict or ignore these works, such as the episode "Sarek" of TNG, which mentions that Sarek's first wife was from Earth (contradicting the "long lost" secret Vulcan princess he supposedly married before Amanda Grayson according to ST5:TFF). Despite the seemingly monumental engineering achievements in "Threshold" (being able to achieve infinite/transwarp speed, even if the process is injurious to organic life), they are never mentioned again in VOY or any other canonical source. Futhermore the The Next Generation episode "All Good Things..." has several scenes set in the future, one in which warp 13 is attained, not only reaching, but shattering the 'Warp 10 Barrier' with no infinite speed or ill effects on people (although it is important to note that "All Good Things..." was made several years before "Threshold"). Another possible explanation is that different time periods use different scales for warp factor, as the original series uses a different scale than that of the following series. Therefore, it is possible that in the timeline shown in "All Good Things...," the scale for warp was revised, hence making it possible to have warp 13.
The term "personal canon" has been used to describe such selective rejection of aspects of the Star Trek franchise by fans, in what is often called Krypto-revisionism.
However, in 1987, TNG began to significantly contradict many assumptions of FASA about the direction of Star Trek. After FASA produced their Star Trek: The Next Generation Officer's Manual after the first season of TNG, which tried to reconcile and retcon on-screen events into the FASA canon, Paramount Pictures revoked FASA's license to publish Star Trek materials, saying that their works were too militaristic for Star Trek. Shortly after the license was revoked, new licensed manuals and source materials were published that quickly contradicted virtually everything created by FASA and all the assumptions about Star Trek canon that had been established over the last several years, in what was interpreted by some as a continuity reboot since so much canon had been revoked and replaced.
Information from the book was used in the production of the first three feature films. The opening to The Motion Picture included a scene where the names and registry numbers of ships mentioned in the Technical Manual were read in the background, while ship schematics copied directly from the Technical Manual were used as displays on the bridge in both ST2:TWOK and ST3:TSFS (including a close up in the latter). These uses by the production staff of Star Trek on screen cemented their image as official parts of Star Trek canon at the time.
For many years, these reference works formed the backbone for treatments of the Star Trek setting. Their general assumptions about Starfleet and the galaxy as a whole were the basis of the Star Fleet Universe and FASA's version of Star Trek, as well as most novels about Star Trek. This book was one of the materials that was stripped of its canonical status at around the same time as FASA's version of Star Trek and its ideas about Star Trek were ignored from that point on.
The Klingon Language Institute (KLI) takes the policy that Klingon is only canon if sanctioned by its creator, Marc Okrand; this essentially limits canon to what appears in the books The Klingon Dictionary, Klingon for the Galactic Traveller, the tapes Power Klingon and Conversational Klingon, the various movies up to and including ST6:TUC (Klingon in the later movies tended to be done without Okrand's involvement) and various articles in the KLI's journal, HolQeD; however, various interviews and conversations with Okrand have also been considered canon. Whether the Klingon in the novel Sarek is canon is debated, although the author, Ann C. Crispin, states in the introduction to that book that the Klingon in that book was okayed by Okrand.
Other groups have used Okrand's work and expanded upon it – for instance, Glen Proechel's Interstellar Language School – or include various other Trek novels, novellas or movies in Klingon language canon.
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