retcon

( /retĀ“kon/)

   [short  for  `retroactive  continuity',  from  the  Usenet  newsgroup
   rec.arts.comics]

   1.  n.  The  common  situation  in  pulp fiction (esp. comics or soap
   operas)  where  a new story `reveals' things about events in previous
   stories,  usually  leaving  the  `facts'  the  same  (thus preserving
   continuity)  while  completely  changing  their  interpretation.  For
   example,  revealing  that  a whole season of Dallas was a dream was a
   retcon.

   2.  vt. To write such a story about a character or fictitious object.
   "Byrne  has  retconned  Superman's  cape  so  that  it  is  no longer
   unbreakable."   "Marvelman's   old  adventures  were  retconned  into
   synthetic  dreams."  "Swamp  Thing  was  retconned from a transformed
   person into a sentient vegetable."

   [This  term  is  included  because  it  is  a good example of hackish
   linguistic  innovation  in a field completely unrelated to computers.
   The  word  retcon will probably spread through comics fandom and lose
   its  association  with  hackerdom  within  a couple of years; for the
   record, it started here. --ESR]

   [1993  update:  some comics fans on the net now claim that retcon was
   independently  in  use  in  comics fandom before rec.arts.comics, and
   have  citations  from  around  1981. In lexicography, nothing is ever
   simple. --ESR]

[glossary]
[Reference(s) to this entry by made by: {backronym}{cookie monster}{CP/M}{JEDR}]