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Poll Is Michael Burnham a "Mary Sue"?

Is Michael Burnham a "Mary Sue" character?

  • Yes

    Votes: 5 5.4%
  • No

    Votes: 87 94.6%

  • Total voters
    92
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No, Burnham is not a Mary Sue.

She is not an obvious surrogate/stand-in for the writer/producer who shows up one day and upstages the regular protagonists, whom everybody falls in love with, and who always saves the day in implausible fashion and can do absolutely no wrong. People are forgetting what the term "Mary Sue" actually means, and just throw it around like a Lacrosse ball for "any character I don't like." :rolleyes:

Kor
 
I get that, but Burnham is basically a fanfic character transplanted into canon.

No, she isn't. In what way is she a fanfic character?

Burnham is professionally competent and emotionally scarred and broken, much like her brother. That's not fanfic; that's realistic. There's a bizarre myth that seems to have been built up around her that she saves the day too much, but I can so, so easily list critical instances in every episode this season in which she doesn't save the day--and at times is even saved by others. In fact, we've seen her actually fail. I cannot fathom legitimate ground on which she can be claimed to be a Mary Sue or even an unrealistic character. She's had far more development, and consistent development, than most Trek characters get in several seasons.

I guarantee you that if Burnham's role had been played by Spock, no one would be calling him a Mary Sue; they'd just say that Spock is brilliant.
 
I explained why I thought she was a fanfic character type, so check that out.

I don't personally have a problem with Burnham's level of competence. It seems on par with any other lead character.
 
I guarantee you that if Burnham's role had been played by Spock, no one would be calling him a Mary Sue; they'd just say that Spock is brilliant.
I'd go even further and say that if the main character was George Samuel Kirk, Jim's literal blood brother, and he had the exact same personality and exploits as Burnham, he still wouldn't be called a Gary Stu as frequently as her. Alright, he's a preexisting character, but there's not much we know about him and by the time we see him, he's already dead.
 
I explained why I thought she was a fanfic character type, so check that out.

I don't personally have a problem with Burnham's level of competence. It seems on par with any other lead character.

I'm assuming you consider Mycroft Holmes a fanfic character type as well, right? he doesn't get mentioned at all for the first 22 Holmes stories even though he's Holmes older brother and closest living relative, forces readers to rethink what they thought of Holmes in a number of ways, and is shown to be every bit as smart as Holmes.
 
No, she isn't. In what way is she a fanfic character?

Burnham is professionally competent and emotionally scarred and broken, much like her brother. That's not fanfic; that's realistic. There's a bizarre myth that seems to have been built up around her that she saves the day too much, but I can so, so easily list critical instances in every episode this season in which she doesn't save the day--and at times is even saved by others. In fact, we've seen her actually fail. I cannot fathom legitimate ground on which she can be claimed to be a Mary Sue or even an unrealistic character. She's had far more development, and consistent development, than most Trek characters get in several seasons.

I guarantee you that if Burnham's role had been played by Spock, no one would be calling him a Mary Sue; they'd just say that Spock is brilliant.

And if all of us who don't like are such sexist misogynist bigots the why are we not complaining about Janway or Kira or Jadiza? All strong competent women?
We are not, or at least me as I found the interesting characters.

I just don't Burnham are she is aloof and boring.
 
Burnham is akin to an author self-insert into a fan fiction. She's awkwardly wedged into the Star Trek mythos for no apparent reason beyond a need to connect the show to TOS. People will bring up Sybok at this point; okay, fair enough. But at least Sybok sort of makes sense. It's not a stretch to say Sarek had a son with another woman before Spock. That is mostly reasonable. But to say Spock has a HUMAN foster sister all of a sudden when Spock's whole character arc was centered upon his acceptance of his human side? Come on.
I don't see why the two are incompatible. He had a human mom too and yet he stilled struggled with his human side. From Sarek's POV, perhaps it was logical to introduce someone closer to his age.

As for the self-insert, yeah I don't see how. She is only "awkwardly wedged in" because she challenges many fan assumptions about Spock. If Sybok makes sense, then Michael makes sense.

I just don't Burnham are she is aloof and boring.
Since this thread is about her being a Mary Sue, and the lack of consistency towards other characters with similar traits, her being boring isn't the issue. Boring is highly subjective.
 
I'm assuming you consider Mycroft Holmes a fanfic character type as well, right? he doesn't get mentioned for the first 22 Holmes stories even though he's Holmes older brother, and is shown to be every bit as smart as Holmes.

I don't know, really, but I doubt you'd like it if I said Ahsoka Tano was a fanficish character too. But she is.
 
I don't see why the two are incompatible. He had a human mom too and yet he stilled struggled with his human side. From Sarek's POV, perhaps it was logical to introduce someone closer to his age.

As for the self-insert, yeah I don't see how. She is only "awkwardly wedged in" because she challenges many fan assumptions about Spock. If Sybok makes sense, then Michael makes sense.


Since this thread is about her being a Mary Sue, and the lack of consistency towards other characters with similar traits, her being boring isn't the issue. Boring is highly subjective.

And honestly, its the people closest to us that we react against. As many of us can see, and clearly Spock can as well, Michael is clearly messed up emotionally, and therefore not only not suitable role model for the kind of person he would prefer to be but the kind of person he would prefer to avoid being. Yes, this makes Spock a more complex and complicated character of increased depth. I don't see that as being a bad thing at all.
 
Since this thread is about her being a Mary Sue, and the lack of consistency towards other characters with similar traits, her being boring isn't the issue. Boring is highly subjective.
Unless someone believes that "Mary Sue" and "boring" are interchangeable synonymous, and if this is the case, well, I hope they keep the receipt of their dictionary, because it's clearly defective.
 
And honestly, its the people closest to us that we react against. As many of us can see, and clearly Spock can as well, Michael is clearly messed up emotionally, and therefore not only not suitable role model for the kind of person he would prefer to be but the kind of person he would prefer to avoid being. Yes, this makes Spock a more complex and complicated character of increased depth. I don't see that as being a bad thing at all.
How dare they make characters more complex!!!!?


;)

I think it would have been better if Michael had been Amanda's daughter from another marriage.
How would that make a difference?
 
I don't know, really, but I doubt you'd like it if I said Ahsoka Tano was a fanficish character too. But she is.

No more than Anakin or Luke was when they were introduced, as far as I can tell, so maybe you have a super broad definition for "fanfiction". On the other hand, I didn't like the character regardless of whether she might have been fanficish or not, as I am not fond of childishly silly characters. I only watched the last 2 eps of season 5 of the Clone Wars for this reason, because it took that long for her to appear to become of any interest to me. And that's about roughly the same point in her life, as far as I can tell, we get introduced to Michael Burnham, as she too is complex enough to me to take interest of her as a character.
 
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