How am I to know the good side from the bad?"
"You will know, when you are calm. At peace, passive.Luke Skywalker and Yoda
The light side of the Force, also known as Ashla,[2] was one of two methods of using the Force. The light side was aligned with calmness, peace, and passiveness, and was used mainly for knowledge and defense.[1] The Jedi were notable practitioners of the light, being selfless servants of the will of the Force,[3] and their enemies, the Sith followed the dark side of the Force.[4]
Essence of the light side
Selflessness
You don't understand what you're asking me to do."
"Yes, I do; you can't save your master, and I can't save mine. I'm asking you to let go.Ezra Bridger is guided by Ahsoka Tano to let go
The light side of the Force was selflessness. Its Jedi practitioners lived in the present,[4] clearing their mind, letting go of their consciousness, and listening to the Force, acting on instinct.[6] The Jedi Order, which was devoted to the light side of the Force,[7] had the core principle of being the guardians of peace and justice,[8] an example of which was by their altruism such as during the High Republic Era.[9] As decreed by the Jedi Code,[10] Jedi were committed to compassion—unconditional love for all living things.[4] Compassionate actions extended to dying, as a member of the Jedi Order believed in loss in the service of a greater good. Recognizing this gave one mastery in the Force, allowing a Jedi to repel spirit.[11] The anchorite sect, bound to the Order and aligned with the light side of the Force, believed that suffering was the basis of life; that one should not ask for a life of any merit, for self-sacrifice is reward enough.[12]
The Force did not belong to the Jedi or any other organization—some individuals who were not part of any religion also believed in selflessness. Such included the Spectres rebel cell, whose leader, Hera Syndulla, taught the young Ezra Bridger that when one finds people who need one's help, one helps them no matter what, and that if all one does is fight for their own life, then one's life is worth nothing.[13]
Balance of the Force
Description
We call upon the Three. Light. Dark. And Balance true. One is no greater than the others. Together, they unite, restore, center, and renew. We walk into the light, acknowledge the dark, and find balance within ourselves. The Force is strong.Incantation recited by Dooku, Lene Kostana, and Sifo-Dyas
Balance in the Force—harmony between all life—was achieved and maintained through understanding and accepting the dark side of the Force that exists within oneself, while serving the light side of the Force; practitioners of this method, namely Jedi, devoted themselves to the will of the Force,[3][1] acting in accordance to the symbiotic relationship between the Living Force and the Cosmic Force—the transformation of the energy of all life to the greater energy field that bound everything—by submitting to the Cosmic Force and what it communicated to them through the midi-chlorians.[15] The dark side adept Snoke believed that, when the dark side grew in power, the light would naturally increase in strength as its counterbalance. Indeed, when Snoke's apprentice Kylo Ren grew in power,[16] a young woman named Rey discovered her Force powers[17] and stood against him as his equal.[16]
History
The Chosen One
A Chosen One shall come, born of no father, and through him will ultimate balance in the Force be restored.A Jedi prophecy
Prior to the fall of the Galactic Republic, there was an ancient prophecy that foretold of a being that would bring balance to the Force: the Chosen One.[4] The Jedi Order believed the Chosen One would destroy the Sith and bring balance to the Force.[19] Jedi Master Qui-Gon Jinn discovered a human boy on Tatooine with no father—Anakin Skywalker—and believed him to be possibly conceived by the midi-chlorians, as the prophecy foretold. Skywalker was trained as a Jedi by Jinn's Padawan, Obi-Wan Kenobi,[4] but he fell to the dark side of the Force in his inability to let go of his lover, Padmé Amidala, and in his self-hatred and lust for power, became apprenticed to the Dark Lord of the Sith Darth Sidious as Darth Vader.[19] However, years later,[20] the son of Anakin Skywalker and Padmé Amidala, the Jedi Knight Luke Skywalker, swayed Vader to sacrifice himself to destroy Darth Sidious.[21] With the Sith extinct, Anakin Skywalker thus fulfilled the prophecy of the Chosen One and brought balance to the Force.[22][23]
The dyad
My mother was the daughter of Vader. Your father was the son of the Emperor. What Palpatine doesn't know is we're a dyad in the Force, Rey. Two that are one.Kylo Ren, to Rey
After the Chosen One restored balance to the Force, Force-sensitives Ben Solo, the grandson of Anakin Skywalker, and Rey, the secret granddaughter of Darth Sidious,[24] who trained as a Jedi under Luke Skywalker[16] and his sister, Leia Organa, came to the forefront of the war between the First Order and the Resistance. The two were eventually bonded by the Force into one entity before it; a unique dyadic Force-bond[25] that transcended physical and mental barriers between the individuals. Through their bond, Ben Solo and Rey were able to destroy the last Sith Lord, a revived Darth Sidious, and thus return balance to the Force as Anakin Skywalker had.[24]
Force powers
A Jedi uses the Force for knowledge and defense… never for attack.Yoda, to Luke Skywalker
The light side of the Force was primarily used for defensive abilities as opposed to aggressive ones. According to Yoda, the dark side was not more powerful than the light side in and of itself, but was merely "quicker, easier, more seductive."[1] Of course, by no means were the followers of light unable to wield the light as a tool for battle.[8][19]
However, practitioners of the light side possessed abilities that users of the dark side often lacked. Light side practitioners were able to "heal" a bled kyber crystal, which were reddened by dark side users, restoring them to a pure form.[26] Some users of the light side knew the technique to heal wounds.[27] The Jedi Order also had an ancient technique called Morichro, an art which allowed the user to slow down the bodily functions of an opponent to the point of death. Master Yaddle was the only Jedi known to use this ability as it was very dangerous.[28] The light side could be used to form defensive barriers, such as the one used by Cere Junda to defend Cal Kestis.[29]
An adherent of the light side could also master the ability of becoming a Force spirit, which allowed the user to preserve their consciousness after death and manifest as a spirit to commune with the living, without the need of a relic binding them to they physical world. With this power, some Force spirits were capable of demonstrating extraordinary feats such as calling down lightning and interacting with the mortal world.[16] Force spirits included Yoda, Obi-Wan Kenobi, Anakin Skywalker,[21] Luke Skywalker, and Leia Skywalker Organa Solo.[24]
Qui-Gon Jinn was the first person to discover this method of achieving immortality, but died before mastering it. Jinn mastered eternal consciousness, but for a time he could not appear as a blue tinted version of his physical form and instead came back as a disembodied voice.[15] Almost a decade later, Jinn mastered the intricacies of being a Force spirit, which he demonstrated when he appeared to Obi-Wan on Tatooine in a nearly corporeal form that was practically indistinguishable from how he had appeared in life.[30]
Behind the scenes
In the second draft of the script for A New Hope, the light side of the Force is called "the Ashla". "The Ashla" was canonized as a name for the light side in Star Wars Rebels: Steps Into Shadow.
Origin
George Lucas
George Lucas, the writer of the original and prequel trilogies, defined the light side of the Force as selflessness, joy, spiritual, everlasting, and difficult to achieve—good, as opposed to the dark side, which individuals fell to through possessiveness, greed, and in their inability to let go, and was defined by Lucas as selfish, pleasure, biological, temporary, and easy to achieve; evil. In addition, George Lucas stated that the dark side could only be overcome through discipline.[31][32] Joy was defined by George Lucas as giving oneself to others—compassion, which is everlasting[33] and is a component of the mental state of happiness besides the emotion of pleasure,[34] which Lucas believed was short-lived, purely self-centered, the peak of which could only be reached once, and was created by a self-centered motive of greed.[33]
When an individual attempts to sustain the peak pleasure, Lucas explained his belief, the individual is doomed; one must let it go.[33] Thus, as he found that an individual had a compassionate side and a self-centered passionate side, a dichotomy between selflessness and selfishness, George Lucas believed that the two sides must be kept in balance for one to do good things; that one's innate greed must be controlled to prevent one from becoming evil and suffer as a result of hatred, as a result of anger, fear, which stems from the inability to let go of things being taken away.[35]
Duality in mythology
By Joseph Campbell's observations, the dualistic nature of the light and dark sides of the Force follows the Hindu[36] trimurti Sadashiva[37] sculpture of the Elephanta Caves, where one finds themself in a field of dual nature and time when one moves out of the eternal transcendence. This dichotomous nature of reality is one perceived by humanity, Campbell states, and duality is only a human apparition, limited to the field of time. Joseph Campbell saw that man's mythology is based on the inside of duality, leading to religions having a tendency to be ethical—sin and atonement, right and wrong. The Bible draws a distinction between God and nature, pitting nature against man and differentiating man from God. The condemnation of nature, Campbell observed, originates from Zarathustra's time and is shared by Islam, yet it is not shared by Shinto, basic Hinduism, or Buddhism. In the latter beliefs, God is nature, and the force's "sides" are only artificial, temporal constructs of humanity.[36] Philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche records his personal characterization of Zarathustra in his novel Thus Spake Zarathustra, where he posits the Übermensch as a goal for humanity, the eternal recurrence through space and time[38]—which is echoed by the course of events in Star Wars[4][6][21]—and criticizes the dichotomous morality of good and evil.[38]
Conveyance
In Star Wars's musical scores, the light side of the Force is signified through the Force motif. As music theorist James Buhler explains in Music and Cinema, where the Force leitmotif first sounds in the Binary Sunset sequence of Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope, there is no apparent link between Luke Skywalker looking out to the horizon of his desert wasteland home and the Force, which is introduced subsequent to the scene. Such moments of inconsistency between the signifier and the signified gives the Star Wars films their mythical character, Buhler explains, as the failure of music in its semiotic function makes it transcendent of immediate human comprehension. Star Wars's transcendental light side music is contrasted by dark side themes such as "The Imperial March," which strictly adheres to the signified—here, the leitmotif no longer signifies what lies beyond signification. No longer communicting mythically, the music intensifies in the opposition between the light side and the dark.[39]
James Buhler further analyses that the light side is signified in music through a naturalized order, whilst the dark's is emphasised in music through an imposed order. The mechanical and unnatural leitmotif of "The Imperial March" defines the dark side as evil, which highlights that Luke Skywalker stopped seeing the Force as a technological tool to dominate Darth Vader's power and defeat the Sith only after suffering the loss of his hand[39] and letting go of his lightsaber.[40]
Appearances
- Star Wars: Galactic Defense
- The High Republic: Path of Deceit (and audiobook)
- The High Republic Adventures: Quest of the Jedi (In flashback(s))
- The High Republic — The Blade 2 (Mentioned only)
- The High Republic — The Blade 3 (Mentioned only)
- The High Republic — The Blade 4 (Mentioned only)
- The High Republic: The Battle of Jedha
- The High Republic: The Battle of Jedha script
- "Tales of Enlightenment: The Unusual Suspect" — Star Wars Insider 216 (Mentioned only)
- "Peace and Unity" — The High Republic (2022) 1
- The High Republic (2022) 1 (Mentioned only)
- The High Republic (2022) 5 (Mentioned only)
- The High Republic: Path of Vengeance (and audiobook)
- The High Republic (2022) 10
- The High Republic: Cataclysm (and audiobook)
- The High Republic: Quest for Planet X (and audiobook) (Mentioned only)
- "Tales of Enlightenment: Last Orders" — Star Wars Insider 219 (Mentioned only)
- "Tales of Enlightenment: Missing Pieces" — Star Wars Insider: The High Republic: Tales of Enlightenment (Mentioned only)
- "Set For Life" — The High Republic Adventures Annual 2021 (Mentioned only)
- The High Republic: Into the Dark (and audiobook)
- "Starlight: Go Together" — Star Wars Insider 199–200 (Mentioned only) (In flashback(s))
- The High Republic: A Test of Courage (and audiobook)
- The High Republic (2021) 1
- The High Republic (2021) 3
- The High Republic (2021) 4
- The High Republic (2021) 5
- The High Republic: The Rising Storm (and audiobook)
- The High Republic: Race to Crashpoint Tower (and audiobook)
- The High Republic Adventures Free Comic Book Day 2021
- The High Republic (2021) 8
- The High Republic: Out of the Shadows (and audiobook)
- The High Republic: Tempest Runner (In flashback(s))
- The High Republic (2021) 9
- The High Republic Adventures (2021) 11
- The High Republic: Mission to Disaster (and audiobook) (Mentioned only)
- The High Republic: Midnight Horizon (and audiobook)
- The High Republic Adventures (2021) 12 (Mentioned only)
- The High Republic: The Fallen Star (and audiobook)
- The High Republic (2021) 12
- The High Republic (2021) 13 (Mentioned only)
- The High Republic Adventures (2021) 13
- The High Republic (2021) 15
- The High Republic: Trail of Shadows 5
- The High Republic: Shadows of Starlight 2 (Mentioned only)
- The High Republic: Shadows of Starlight 1
- The High Republic Adventures – The Nameless Terror 4 (In flashback(s))
- The High Republic: Shadows of Starlight 3 (Mentioned only)
- "Rogue Element" — The High Republic: Tales of Light and Life (and audiobook) (Mentioned only)
- "All the Republic" — Revelations (2023) 1
- The High Republic: Escape from Valo (and audiobook)
- The High Republic: The Eye of Darkness (and audiobook)
- The High Republic Adventures (2023) 3
- The High Republic: The Edge of Balance, Vol. 3
- The High Republic (2023) 1
- The High Republic (2023) 2 (Mentioned only)
- The High Republic (2023) 5
- The High Republic (2023) 6
- The High Republic (2023) 7
- The High Republic (2023) 8 (Mentioned only)
- The High Republic: Temptation of the Force (and audiobook)
- The High Republic: Tears of the Nameless (and audiobook)
- The High Republic Adventures – Echoes of Fear 2 (Mentioned only) (In flashback(s))
- The High Republic: Seeds of Starlight (Mentioned only)
- The High Republic: Tempest Breaker (In flashback(s))
- The High Republic: Tempest Breaker script (In flashback(s))
- The Acolyte — "Night"
- Mace Windu 4 (Mentioned only)
- Age of Republic - Qui-Gon Jinn 1
- Darth Maul (2017) 5
- Darth Maul – Black, White & Red 1 (Mentioned only)
- Queen's Peril (and audiobook)
- Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace
- Star Wars Journeys: The Phantom Menace
- Star Wars Battlefront II
- Age of Republic - Obi-Wan Kenobi 1 (Mentioned only; in the opening crawl)
- Obi-Wan and Anakin 1
- Dooku: Jedi Lost
- Star Wars: Episode II Attack of the Clones
- Jedi of the Republic – Mace Windu 5
- Hyperspace Stories 11
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars film
- "Sharing the Same Face" — The Clone Wars: Stories of Light and Dark (and audiobook)
- Catalyst: A Rogue One Novel (and audiobook) (Mentioned only)
- "Tales of Villainy: Give & Take" — Star Wars Adventures (2020) 12
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "Overlords"
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "Altar of Mortis"
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "Ghosts of Mortis" (Vision to Anakin Skywalker)
- Dark Disciple (and audiobook)
- Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith
- Darth Vader (2017) 3
- Darth Vader (2017) 4 (Mentioned only)
- Darth Vader (2017) 5
- Darth Vader (2017) 6 (Mentioned only)
- Darth Vader (2017) 7 (Mentioned only)
- Darth Vader (2017) 8 (Mentioned only)
- Darth Vader (2017) 9 (Mentioned only)
- Darth Vader (2017) 10
- Darth Vader (2017) 14
- Ahsoka (and audiobook) (Mentioned only)
- Darth Vader (2017) 19
- Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order
- Inquisitors 1
- Darth Vader (2017) 25 (Vision to Darth Vader)
- Jedi: Battle Scars (and audiobook) (Mentioned only)
- "The Ghosts of Maul" — Stories of Jedi and Sith (and audiobook) (Mentioned only)
- Obi-Wan Kenobi — "Part II"
- Obi-Wan Kenobi 2
- Obi-Wan Kenobi — "Part III"
- Obi-Wan Kenobi 3
- Obi-Wan Kenobi — "Part IV"
- Obi-Wan Kenobi 4
- Star Wars Rebels webcomic
- Star Wars Rebels: Spark of Rebellion
- Star Wars Rebels: The Rebellion Begins
- The Secret Jedi: The Adventures of Kanan Jarrus: Rebel Leader
- Kanan 10
- Star Wars Rebels — "Path of the Jedi"
- Kanan's Jedi Training
- Star Wars Rebels: Battle to the End
- Star Wars Rebels — "Legends of the Lasat"
- Star Wars Rebels: Steps Into Shadow (First identified as Ashla)
- Star Wars Rebels — "The Holocrons of Fate"
- The Mighty Chewbacca in the Forest of Fear! (and audiobook)
- Star Wars Rebels — "A World Between Worlds"
- "Blood Moon Uprising" — Stories of Jedi and Sith (and audiobook) (Mentioned only)
- "Maz's Scoundrels" — Age of Resistance Special 1 (Mentioned only)
- Obi-Wan 2 (Mentioned only)
- Obi-Wan 3 (Mentioned only) (In flashback(s))
- Obi-Wan 4 (Mentioned only) (In flashback(s))
- Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope (First appearance)
- A New Hope: The Princess, the Scoundrel, and the Farm Boy (and audiobook)
- Star Wars: The Original Trilogy – A Graphic Novel
- Star Wars Annual (2015) 4 (Mentioned only; in the opening crawl)
- Doctor Aphra: An Audiobook Original (Mentioned only)
- Star Wars (2015) 26
- Star Wars (2015) 27
- Star Wars (2015) 28
- Star Wars (2015) 29
- Star Wars (2015) 30
- Doctor Aphra (2016) 11 (Mentioned only)
- Doctor Aphra (2016) 37 (Mentioned only)
- Yoda 1
- Yoda 8 (Mentioned only) (In flashback(s))
- Yoda 10
- Star Wars: Episode V The Empire Strikes Back
- Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back junior novelization
- "Disturbance" — From a Certain Point of View: The Empire Strikes Back (and audiobook) (Mentioned only)
- "Vergence" — From a Certain Point of View: The Empire Strikes Back (and audiobook) (Mentioned only)
- Star Wars (2020) 4
- Star Wars (2020) 6
- Star Wars (2020) 11 (Mentioned only)
- Star Wars (2020) 12 (Mentioned only)
- War of the Bounty Hunters 4 (Mentioned only)
- Crimson Reign 1
- Star Wars (2020) 20 (Mentioned only)
- Doctor Aphra (2020) 17 (Mentioned only)
- Crimson Reign 3 (In flashback(s))
- Darth Vader (2020) 24 (Mentioned only)
- Star Wars (2020) 28 (Mentioned only)
- Doctor Aphra (2020) 24 (Mentioned only)
- Hidden Empire 2 (Mentioned only)
- Hidden Empire 3 (Mentioned only)
- Doctor Aphra (2020) 29 (Mentioned only) (In flashback(s))
- Doctor Aphra (2020) 30 (Mentioned only)
- Doctor Aphra (2020) 33 (Mentioned only)
- Star Wars (2020) 35 (Mentioned only)
- Star Wars (2020) 36 (Mentioned only)
- Star Wars (2020) 41 (Mentioned only)
- Star Wars (2020) 42 (Mentioned only)
- Star Wars (2020) 43
- Star Wars: Episode VI Return of the Jedi
- "The Light That Falls" — From a Certain Point of View: Return of the Jedi (and audiobook) (Indirect mention only)
- "Masters" — Stories of Jedi and Sith (and audiobook)
- "Brotherhood" — From a Certain Point of View: Return of the Jedi (and audiobook)
- Star Wars Adventures: Shadow of Vader's Castle (Mentioned only)
- Battle of Jakku — Insurgency Rising 3 (Mentioned only)
- Star Wars: Uprising
- Aftermath (and audiobook) (Mentioned only)
- Aftermath: Life Debt (and audiobook)
- Aftermath: Empire's End (and audiobook) (Mentioned only)
- The Mandalorian — "Chapter 16: The Rescue"
- The Mandalorian: The Rescue
- Shadow of the Sith (and audiobook)
- Star Wars (2020) 50 (Mentioned only)
- The Rise of Kylo Ren 2 (In flashback(s))
- The Rise of Kylo Ren 4
- Age of Resistance - Supreme Leader Snoke 1
- The Legends of Luke Skywalker (and audiobook) (Mentioned only)
- Force Collector (and audiobook)
- Poe Dameron 20 (Mentioned only)
- Poe Dameron 21 (Mentioned only)
- Poe Dameron 25 (Mentioned only)
- Hyperspace Stories 8
- Star Wars: Episode VII The Force Awakens
- Star Wars: The Force Awakens novelization (and audiobook)
- Star Wars: The Force Awakens: A Junior Novel (and audiobook)
- Star Wars: The Force Awakens Graphic Novel Adaptation (Mentioned only)
- The Force Awakens Adaptation 3 (Mentioned only)
- Star Wars: Episode VIII The Last Jedi
- Star Wars: The Last Jedi: Expanded Edition (and audiobook)
- Star Wars: The Last Jedi: A Junior Novel (and audiobook)
- The Last Jedi Adaptation 1 (Mentioned only)
- The Last Jedi Adaptation 2
- The Last Jedi Adaptation 5 (Mentioned only)
- Poe Dameron 28 (Mentioned only)
- "The Wanderer" — Myths & Fables (and audiobook) (In flashback(s))
- Halcyon Legacy 1 (Mentioned only) (In flashback(s))
- Star Wars: Episode IX The Rise of Skywalker
- Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker: Expanded Edition (and audiobook)
- Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker: A Junior Novel (and audiobook)
- Star Wars: Galaxy of Heroes
Non-canon appearances
- ° LEGO Star Wars: The Freemaker Adventures
- LEGO Star Wars: The Force Awakens
- Star Wars: Jedi Temple Challenge — "Episode 1"
- Star Wars: Jedi Temple Challenge — "Episode 2"
- Star Wars: Jedi Temple Challenge — "Episode 3"
- Star Wars: Jedi Temple Challenge — "Episode 4"
- Star Wars: Jedi Temple Challenge — "Episode 5"
- Star Wars: Jedi Temple Challenge — "Episode 6"
- Star Wars: Jedi Temple Challenge — "Episode 7"
- Star Wars: Jedi Temple Challenge — "Episode 8"
- Star Wars: Jedi Temple Challenge — "Episode 9"
- Star Wars: Jedi Temple Challenge — "Episode 10"
- Star Wars: Visions — "Akakiri"
- Star Wars: Visions — "T0-B1"
- Star Wars: Visions — "The Elder"
- Star Wars: Visions — "The Ninth Jedi"
- Star Wars: Visions — "The Village Bride"
- LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga
- "The Elder" — Big Gangan Vol.06
- Star Wars: Visions — "Aau's Song"
- Star Wars: Visions — "Journey to the Dark Head"
- Star Wars: Visions — "The Bandits of Golak"
Sources
- Star Wars: Card Trader (Set: Base Series 1)
- Star Wars: The Force Awakens: The Visual Dictionary
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 4 (Helmets: Luke Skywalker — X-wing Pilot)
- Star Wars Expert Guide
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 13 (Databank A-Z: Poe Dameron–Delta 7-B)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 14 (Highlights of the Saga: The Second Death Star)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 17 (Databank A-Z: Ewoks–Finn (FN-2187))
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 18 (Databank A-Z: First Order–Fyrnocks)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 18 (Weapons & Uniforms: The First Order)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 21 (Helmets: Kylo Ren)
- Entertainment Weekly's Ultimate Guide to Rogue One
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 28 (Databank A-Z: Queen Jamillia–Jedi Temples)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 32 (Databank A-Z: Kel Dor–Ki-Adi-Mundi)
- Star Wars: The Visual Encyclopedia
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 34 (Databank A-Z: Davish Krail–Kuat Drive Yards)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 35 (Databank A-Z: Kyber Crystals–Laser Cannons)
- Star Wars Super Graphic: A Visual Guide to a Galaxy Far, Far Away
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 43 (Databank A-Z: Leia Organa)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 44 (Databank A-Z: Zeb Orrelios–Pau City)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 50 (Databank A-Z: Luke Skywalker–Han Solo)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 51 (Highlights of the Saga: Duel on Stygeon Prime)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 51 (Weapons & Uniforms: Dark Side Servants)
- Star Wars: Lightsaber Battles
- Dawn of Rebellion
- Star Wars Bust Collection 4 (Star Wars Universe: Jedi vs. Sith: An Imbalance in the Force)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 57 (Weapons & Uniforms: Chopper Base—Atollon)
- Star Wars: Legion — Legion Core Set (Card: Jedi Mind Trick) (Reissued in Clone Wars Core Set)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 59 (Databank A-Z: Darth Tyranus)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 59 (Highlights of the Saga: Help from an Old Friend)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 66 (Databank A-Z: Venator–Asajj Ventress)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 68 (Databank A-Z: Pre Vizsla–Quinlan Vos)
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 69 (Weapons & Uniforms: The Jedi Purge)
- Star Wars: Alien Archive
- Star Wars: Smuggler's Guide
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 77 (Databank A-Z: Grand Master Yoda)
- Jedi Knights | Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures Fun Facts on the official Star Wars Kids YouTube channel (backup link)
- Star Wars: Creatures Big & Small
- Ultimate Star Wars, New Edition
- Star Wars: The Secrets of the Jedi
- Star Wars: Card Trader (Card: Maz Kanata - 2020 Base Series)
- Star Wars: Card Trader (Card: Asajj Ventress - Star Wars: Masterwork - The Dark Side)
- "R2-D2" — Star Wars Encyclopedia
- Star Wars: The Lightsaber Collection
- The Art of Star Wars: The Mandalorian Season One
- "The Battle of Hoth and the Second Death Star" — Star Wars Encyclopedia
- Disney Gallery: The Mandalorian — "Making of Season Two"
- "C-3PO" — Star Wars Encyclopedia
- "Before the dark times…" — Star Wars - Das offizielle Magazin 101
- "Yoda and Other Users of the Force" — Star Wars Encyclopedia
- Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga – The Official Collector's Edition
- "Anakin Skywalker" — Star Wars Encyclopedia
- Star Wars: The Secrets of the Sith
- Art Prints (Pack: The Duel: Rey) (backup link)
- Art Prints (Pack: The Duel: Kylo Ren) (backup link)
- SWCA 2022: 4 Things We Learned From the Attack of the Chords Panel on StarWars.com (backup link)
- SWCA 2022: Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords Coming to Nintendo Switch on StarWars.com (backup link)
- The Story Behind Lucasfilm and Volkswagen's Fantastic Obi-Wan Kenobi-Inspired Vehicles on StarWars.com (backup link)
- Star Wars Inside Intel: The Inquisitorius on StarWars.com (article) (backup link)
- Star Wars: Timelines
- Star Wars: The High Republic Character Encyclopedia
- Star Wars Bestiary, Vol. 1: Creatures of the Galaxy
- Star Wars: The High Republic: The Lightsaber Collection
- Ahsoka Tano in the Databank (backup link)
- Bell Zettifar in the Databank (backup link)
- Daughter in the Databank (backup link)
- Father in the Databank (backup link)
- Force Lightning in the Databank (backup link)
- The Force in the Databank (backup link)
- The Nameless in the Databank (backup link)
Non-canon sources
Notes and references
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Star Wars: Episode V The Empire Strikes Back
- ↑ Star Wars Rebels: Steps Into Shadow
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Star Wars: Absolutely Everything You Need to Know
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace
- ↑ Star Wars Rebels — "A World Between Worlds"
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope
- ↑ Star Wars: The Secrets of the Jedi
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 The High Republic: Light of the Jedi
- ↑ Sskeer | Characters of Star Wars the High Republic on the official Star Wars YouTube channel (backup link) (Posted on StarWars.com)
- ↑ Star Wars: Episode II Attack of the Clones
- ↑ Star Wars (2020) 6
- ↑ Aftermath: Empire's End
- ↑ Star Wars Rebels: Spark of Rebellion
- ↑ Dooku: Jedi Lost
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "Voices"
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 Star Wars: Episode VIII The Last Jedi
- ↑ Star Wars: Episode VII The Force Awakens
- ↑ Master & Apprentice
- ↑ 19.0 19.1 19.2 Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith
- ↑ Star Wars: Galactic Atlas
- ↑ 21.0 21.1 21.2 Star Wars: Episode VI Return of the Jedi
- ↑ Luke Skywalker Biography Gallery in the Databank (backup link)
- ↑ Return of the Jedi: Beware the Power of the Dark Side!
- ↑ 24.0 24.1 24.2 24.3 Star Wars: Episode IX The Rise of Skywalker
- ↑ Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker: The Visual Dictionary
- ↑ Ahsoka
- ↑ The Mandalorian — "Chapter 7: The Reckoning"
- ↑ Star Wars Character Encyclopedia: Updated and Expanded
- ↑ Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order
- ↑ "Master and Apprentice" — From a Certain Point of View
- ↑ Star Wars: The Complete Saga (Star Wars Episode V: George Lucas On The Force)
- ↑ The Making of Star Wars Revenge of the Sith
- ↑ 33.0 33.1 33.2 George Lucas' Advice on the Colorado Flier YouTube channel (backup link)
- ↑ George Lucas: Project Happiness Interview on the Mount Madonna School Values in World Thought YouTube channel (backup link)
- ↑ American Voices - George Lucas Special by Senator Bill Bradley | Free Listening on SoundCloud by Bradley, Bill on soundcloud.com (November 15, 2015) (archived from the original on March 15, 2017)
- ↑ 36.0 36.1 The Power of Myth: The Message of the Myth (Episode 2) on the Zen Lokamaya YouTube channel (backup link)
- ↑ Elephanta Island on www.britannica.com (archived from the original on September 17, 2020)
- ↑ 38.0 38.1 Thus Spake Zarathustra
- ↑ 39.0 39.1 Buhler, James. 2000. "Star Wars, Music and Myth." In Music and Cinema, Buhler, Flinn, Neumeyer eds.. Wesleyan University Press
- ↑ Star Wars (2020) 4