By the way, please pardon the double post but I want to be clear about this particular point -- I find Christopher's argument here to be completely reasonable, and is what I was looking for from the beginning. Bringing a character back from the dead is a lazy path to take when dealing with death in fiction, and, I suggest to Christopher that this is the real rationale for why Data should not be brought back.
I'm of a different opinion: dead characters are easy to write for, because they do nothing. It's living characters that are challenging. Leaving Data dead indefinately is boring; it's a net loss to the fictional universe, with no evident compensation in terms of storylines, etc.
In some ways, it doesn't help that Data's death has had so little effect. We've had a few scenes of Picard musing on loss or LaForge trying to get used to not having his friend around, but otherwise Data's death has been regrettably inconsequential. I think of Chewbecca, for instance. Chewie had a great death, very spectacular, but more to the point, his death affected those around him deeply and propelled many of the subsequent character arcs. Han Solo's boozy spiral into self-destruction, the near collapse of his marriage and his attempts to find himself again; or Anakin's sense of guilt and estrangement from his family, and what came from his need to prove himself as a result; and how all of it tied into the greater galactic events. Chewbacca's death had lasting results, and it took half the NJO to repair the damage, or rather find a way to live with it. Now, I certainly don't expect the sometimes stolid TNG cast to react in such a melodramatic fashion, but it would have been nice to have Data's absence felt more strongly. I suppose part of the problem is that, other than the Picard/Crusher-'ship-centric Death in Winter, we just straightaway went into the Borg arc, with only Q&A really providing the opportunity to pause and feel the (rather mild) grief.
All of the nonsense about it being implausible or hard to do narratively is just disingenuous. It's clearly quite easy to do, and that's what I was having difficulty with understanding, as it seemed to be dodging the issue.
It is, rather, justification; and it's bad justification for being so obviously paper-thin in a fictional universe full of possibilities like Star Trek is. Rather, Data is dead because so far nobody has developed a good enough motive and method for his return. Which is fine; I certainly prefer a good story to a rushed one, which I feel was the case with the mind-boggling contrivances used to bring Tucker 'back'.
*raises hand*
Me, that was me. Over here, me!![]()
Really? Mind if I ask what was your reasoning?
Yikes, I'm more than a little confused as to why Christopher is getting so angry,
Sometimes intransigence is mistaken for a solid debate platform. It's a shame because there's no need, either for this 'line in the sand' attitude towards Data or taking umbrage when we're just trying to work through the reasoning.
Hm, but who's the judge of what's deemed "nonsensical" and "in demand of reinterpretation"?
(...)
I regret Data's death primarily because of the myriad stories that still could have been told, like his first real command etc. And I would have loved to read these stories. On the other hand, I find it quite interesting that the reset button on his emotion chip wasn't actually addressed in TrekLit. Which would be quite an interesting character story that could yet be told. Or was it perhaps in the ATT-series?!?
It was, indeed, in the first two books of the A Time To... series. But yes, I quite agree with both the point that what appears to need reinterpreting is a judgment value, not some ironclad law of physics (I never thought Janeway needed the reinterpretation of String Theory 3, for instance, and could have done with far less when it came to Tucker), and that Data had tons of potential as a character that could have been taken in any number of directions; just because Data's own goal was to move through the echelons doesn't mean that's what needed to happen, or would happen should there be a resurrection. Indeed, I would hope it woulnd't. Sisko, returnee, is a different person in a quite different position and following different arcs than he was on the series; likewise for Tucker, who has been 'brought back to life' (though I agree we never really saw him die in the first place), but can never go home again, so to speak. If and when Data returns to the literary universe, I would hope for a similar deep and affecting change in character and circumstances. Maybe Data's resurrection could give us the storyline impact that his death has thus far failed to deliver on.
Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman