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#16 |
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Commander
Location: DS9 Mirror Universe
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Re: Did Vulcan space have a name?
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#17 | |
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Writer
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Re: Did Vulcan space have a name?
So relax. Nobody is quoting anything as though it's "authoritative," because of course the whole thing is imaginary. We're merely pointing out what the tie-in materials have asserted. The core body of the fictional franchise has not addressed the issue, so we turn our attention to other interpretations of the fiction which have addressed the issue. We're not claiming it's the "true" or "authoritative" answer, we're just talking about stories people wrote.
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Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#18 | |
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Admiral
Location: The Red Flag: May Day 2013
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Re: Did Vulcan space have a name?
Who gives a fuck? It's all equally imaginary. "Non-canon" just means that future episodes or films might contradict it -- and that's really no different from canon, since plenty of later episodes or films have contradicted earlier canonical works.
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This dream must end, this world must know: We all depend on the beast below. |
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#19 |
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Writer
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Re: Did Vulcan space have a name?
Of course, tie-ins can still contradict each other; Pocket, IDW, and ST Online all have separate and incompatible continuities, sometimes more than one per company. But that's always been the way. Again, in those early days, the tie-ins went in a lot of different directions. Since there wasn't any new "gospel" being produced, or at least very little of it, it just didn't seem that important whether a story conformed to some singular "real" version of things. It was an exercise in make-believe, something where authors and fans were free to use their imaginations to fill in the gaps, and it was much more individualized. None of this modern attitude of authoritarian canon than fans have to submit and conform to or else... something. It was a lot more populist than that.
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Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#20 | ||
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Captain
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Re: Did Vulcan space have a name?
I tend to think that a new timeline was created before "Broken Bow", for there are so many contradictions between Enterprise and the first four series in what was established. One example comes to mind when I think about Vulcan. From "Balance of Terror": McCoy:
For a species that valued logic and peace, they do have a mean streak of specism. (Is that the right word?) Some of their people viewed humans as "barbarians", a term that Spock once referred to his species once in the third season. (A consistent contrast in Star Trek since the beginning has been the duality of barbarity and civility.) |
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#21 | |
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Writer
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Re: Did Vulcan space have a name?
And then there are the contradictions betwen TOS and the movies. In TMP, how come the Klingons changed appearance, not to mention every last piece of Starfleet technology and design? Why is Kirk saying he was only out in deep space for five years when he was in Starfleet for nearly a decade before the "five-year mission" began? And TWOK's contradictions are enormous. How did Khan's multiethnic band of followers turn into a bunch of blond Nordic types? Why are they in their mid-20s if they were stranded as adults 15 years earlier? Why do they have a movie-era medical console in their hovel, and why does Khan wear a movie-era Starfleet insignia around his neck? How does Khan know Chekov? How can Kirk say he's "never faced death" after losing Gary, Edith, Sam, Aurelan, Miramanee, and his unborn son? And so on. There's a whole series of YouTube videos cataloguing the inconsistencies among the various Trek shows -- I think KingDaniel's sig has a link to them. It's just that as the years pass, fandom gets used to those inconsistencies and learns to rationalize them or gloss them over -- so the equal inconsistencies in the newest incarnation seem unprecedented to them, and you get this stuff about "It's not real Trek because it isn't consistent." People said the same thing decades ago about the TOS movies and TNG. But they got over it. Well, most of them did. There have been a couple of posters on this BBS in recent years who still consider everything after TMP or thereabouts to be apocryphal.
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Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#22 | |
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Commodore
Location: Terra 3
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Re: Did Vulcan space have a name?
If you don't want to read the books, that's fine... but it's quite petty to jump on the case of anyone who presumes to discuss them.... on a discussion board.
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"I was never a Star Trek fan." J.J. Abrams |
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#23 |
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Writer
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Re: Did Vulcan space have a name?
The canon is just the main, ongoing story being told by the original creators or their direct inheritors -- a story that, like any work of fiction, is subject to error or intentional revisionism as it continues to be told. Sure, other stories by other creators won't necessarily be acknowledged by that core story, and might not be consistent with it in every respect, but so what? They're all just stories made up for our entertainment. And we can enjoy them as stories and be interested in the ideas they contain.
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Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#24 | |
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Commodore
Location: Terra 3
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Re: Did Vulcan space have a name?
So those creators and inheritors all have varying opinions on what is and isn't canon in Trek. So it comes back to opinion. Take what you want for your Trek experience or don't at your pleasure.
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"I was never a Star Trek fan." J.J. Abrams |
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#25 | ||
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Admiral
Location: House of Kang, now with ridges
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Re: Did Vulcan space have a name?
The general consensus has been on screen= canon. Taylor's book was only (semi-) canon when she was producing.
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Nerys Myk's Midnight In Never Land A novel of Dark Fantasy @ Amazon.com |
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#26 | |
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Writer
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Re: Did Vulcan space have a name?
As for Mosaic, Jeri Taylor did indeed intend it to be canonical while she was the showrunner, and she referenced it in "Coda." But her successors decided that her novels were not to be treated as canon. It's easy to define canon when only one creator is involved; for instance, Sherlock Holmes fiction by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is canonical, while that by other authors is apocryphal. The Del Rey Babylon 5 novels or the Buffy Season 8-9 comics are part of their series' canons because their creators personally oversee them and choose them as the medium for telling a continuation of the core story. But with Trek, it's more complicated because the responsibility passes from one hand to another. But as I said, canons are mutable. Fans are wrong to use "canon" to mean "right" or "real" or "consistent," because any long-running canon contradicts itself over time. A canon is a story being made up on the go, and that makes it subject to adjustment and revision. What is "real" in canon is whatever the current interpretation is. Think of it as successive approximations. If the storyteller is trying to approach some Platonic ideal of what the "real" story is, they may make mistakes early on but then home in on it better as they continue. See my above comments -- it took TOS the better part of a season to get such basic concepts as the Federation and Starfleet settled on. The later ideas superseded the earlier, rougher ones.
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Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#27 |
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Commodore
Location: Terra 3
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Re: Did Vulcan space have a name?
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"I was never a Star Trek fan." J.J. Abrams |
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#28 | ||
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Vice Admiral
Location: Italy, EU
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Re: Did Vulcan space have a name?
Wasn't the name "Whole Vulcan" used in Spock's World? I have only a copy in Italian (where it's mentioned as the "Intero Vulcano"), but it's hard to decide if they are talking about the actual name or the political entity of just speaking in general terms: they say something like "on behalf of the Whole Vulcan etc", but capitalized words are used. Maybe it's clearer in the original English.
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Scientist. Gentleman. Teacher. Fighter. Lover. Father. Last edited by iguana_tonante; January 22 2013 at 12:51 AM. |
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#29 |
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Writer
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Re: Did Vulcan space have a name?
__________________
Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#30 | |
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Captain
Location: Planet Carcazed
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Re: Did Vulcan space have a name?
Hawaii, as a group of islands, is not part of CONUS. It's a state, but not on the continent. No decision to be made, as it is self-evident. If you were being ironic, well...
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=Carcazoid= |
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