I can't believe that somebody brought this word...
...into a Peanuts discussion.canon
And that's why it's in the SF/F forum.

I can't believe that somebody brought this word...
...into a Peanuts discussion.canon
So.... Some people think that "anything that isn't strictly human and normal-based using live-action" counts as Sci-Fi/Fantasy?
Right?! I'm still waiting for Bill Watterson to explain where the black pads on Hobbes' paws went. They appeared in early strips, so they're canon!I can't believe that somebody brought this word...
...into a Peanuts discussion.canon
I did notice that Franklin is going to their school.. when before he was quite far away.
Well, that makes sense. At the time Franklin was introduced, racial integration would've been less common -- and, of course, Charlie Brown's neighborhood had been uniformly white for the previous 18 years of the strip. That's the sort of thing that it makes sense to update.
He's in the sequel, What's Happening, Charlie Brown!!.I'm not sure, but did we see Rerun at all?
I'm not sure it had anything to do with integration; Franklin went to school across town with Peppermint Patty and Marcie.
I'm not sure it had anything to do with integration; Franklin went to school across town with Peppermint Patty and Marcie.
I'm not talking so literally, but more about what the approach symbolizes about the respective generations. In 1968, it would've been more likely that a white child would've had to go far afield from his own neighborhood to meet a black child, as Charlie Brown did (after all, the strip was mainly from his viewpoint).
These days, at least in most urban or suburban areas, children of different ethnicities are more likely to interact regularly. So it makes sense for a modern Peanuts to treat Franklin as a member of the core community from the start rather than a visiting outsider. It's simply adjusting to the times.
It is problematic that Linus and Lucy are the same age and in the same class, though. The whole point of Linus is that he's younger than the other characters but he's actually the smartest.
Also I thought in the strip Charlie Brown met Franklin at camp.
It is problematic that Linus and Lucy are the same age and in the same class, though. The whole point of Linus is that he's younger than the other characters but he's actually the smartest.
What about Sally? I think she was even younger than Linus, and was introduced as a baby.
What's interesting about the Peanuts characters is that they weren't perpetually ageless, but just aged really slowly. IIRC, Charlie Brown was about three when the strip started in 1950, and by the '80s he was maybe eight and a half or nine. And of course Linus, Schroeder, Sally, and eventually Rerun were introduced as babies and then got older. But I guess they didn't age consistently.
I'm not talking so literally, but more about what the approach symbolizes about the respective generations. In 1968, it would've been more likely that a white child would've had to go far afield from his own neighborhood to meet a black child, as Charlie Brown did (after all, the strip was mainly from his viewpoint). These days, at least in most urban or suburban areas, children of different ethnicities are more likely to interact regularly.
It is problematic that Linus and Lucy are the same age and in the same class, though. The whole point of Linus is that he's younger than the other characters but he's actually the smartest.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.