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Poll: Bring Janeway back?

Should Janeway be brought back?


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I think there is more to be said in the discussion of character death in general, but for the moment, the direction this thread has (again) taken makes me curious about something. This is a question I have posed two or three times now, in this thread and over in the "How we deal with death" thread, and unless I missed it, it's never gotten a real answer.

To Lynx, in particular, but really, to anyone who is so unhappy with Janeway's death that it would cause them to stop reading the books, to essentially boycott Trek until the death is reversed (so note, this question doesn't really apply to anyone who has said they are unhappy or even furious over Janeway's death, but still read/are planning to read Full Circle and other new books to see what happens)... Basically to anyone that has been going beyond simply saying "I don't like that she died" and is instead treating this as a "problem that should be corrected." And that question is:

Do you simply feel that NO main characters should be killed off, ever? And I'm not just talking about in the books, I'm also talking about in the various TV series, as well, since main character death was no more necessary in a TV show than it was in a book. Heck, I'm also saying to broaden this question beyond Trek, and just think about it in general. Would any of you actually be happy reading books (or watching TV shows, or movies, or playing video games with complex stories, etc etc), where you KNEW, for a FACT, that no main characters would die before the end of the story?

I'm just trying to figure this out...
 
All of which would end up with her still being dead, no thank you.

That's ridiculous. Don't ever read any autobiographies. The authors are all gonna die one day. (Gosh, what a spoiler!)

Don't read any books about any Star Trek characters - except the immortal ones.
 
We've been told that current editorial policy is that Janeway is dead, dead, dead and not coming back.

No, we haven't. Kirsten Beyer recently mentioned, IIRC, that Margaret Clark has never said that, and she's the editor. No decision had been made about what happens beyond "Unworthy".
 
Ian, I remember this the way Trent remembers it. The reason there have been thousands of posts on this subject is that people were saying it's no big deal, she's with the Q, she'll be back -- and then, as I recall, someone involved with the books (Margaret? can't recall for sure) said no, as far as we're concerned, she's dead, period, end of. That's when this all kicked off.
 
I think there is more to be said in the discussion of character death in general, but for the moment, the direction this thread has (again) taken makes me curious about something. This is a question I have posed two or three times now, in this thread and over in the "How we deal with death" thread, and unless I missed it, it's never gotten a real answer.

To Lynx, in particular, but really, to anyone who is so unhappy with Janeway's death that it would cause them to stop reading the books, to essentially boycott Trek until the death is reversed (so note, this question doesn't really apply to anyone who has said they are unhappy or even furious over Janeway's death, but still read/are planning to read Full Circle and other new books to see what happens)... Basically to anyone that has been going beyond simply saying "I don't like that she died" and is instead treating this as a "problem that should be corrected." And that question is:

Do you simply feel that NO main characters should be killed off, ever? And I'm not just talking about in the books, I'm also talking about in the various TV series, as well, since main character death was no more necessary in a TV show than it was in a book. Heck, I'm also saying to broaden this question beyond Trek, and just think about it in general. Would any of you actually be happy reading books (or watching TV shows, or movies, or playing video games with complex stories, etc etc), where you KNEW, for a FACT, that no main characters would die before the end of the story?

I'm just trying to figure this out...

No, I have never stated that NO main character should be killed off, ever. There might be reasons where it's necessary, I mean if you watch "Titanic" then it is supposed that the main characters, well at least many of them are going to die.

But when it comes to series like Star Trek, I think that it would only happen during very specific circumstances and "the Janeway case" is definitely not such a case.
 
I think there is more to be said in the discussion of character death in general, but for the moment, the direction this thread has (again) taken makes me curious about something. This is a question I have posed two or three times now, in this thread and over in the "How we deal with death" thread, and unless I missed it, it's never gotten a real answer.

To Lynx, in particular, but really, to anyone who is so unhappy with Janeway's death that it would cause them to stop reading the books, to essentially boycott Trek until the death is reversed (so note, this question doesn't really apply to anyone who has said they are unhappy or even furious over Janeway's death, but still read/are planning to read Full Circle and other new books to see what happens)... Basically to anyone that has been going beyond simply saying "I don't like that she died" and is instead treating this as a "problem that should be corrected." And that question is:

Do you simply feel that NO main characters should be killed off, ever? And I'm not just talking about in the books, I'm also talking about in the various TV series, as well, since main character death was no more necessary in a TV show than it was in a book. Heck, I'm also saying to broaden this question beyond Trek, and just think about it in general. Would any of you actually be happy reading books (or watching TV shows, or movies, or playing video games with complex stories, etc etc), where you KNEW, for a FACT, that no main characters would die before the end of the story?

I'm just trying to figure this out...

No, I have never stated that NO main character should be killed off, ever. There might be reasons where it's necessary, I mean if you watch "Titanic" then it is supposed that the main characters, well at least many of them are going to die.

But when it comes to series like Star Trek, I think that it would only happen during very specific circumstances and "the Janeway case" is definitely not such a case.

Just out of Morbid curiosity, what circumstances are these? Saving earth from the borg perchance? Or just run of the mill "zapped by Tar monster's laser beam" I think we're in the wrong business here - "Tasha Yar was killed off 2 decades ago, but I don't care, I'm starting the BRING BACK TASHA in OUR UNIVERSE" campaign, any takers?

EDIT:

People actually did die on Titanic though, it happened, Star Trek is fiction, anything can happen :)
 
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I think there is more to be said in the discussion of character death in general, but for the moment, the direction this thread has (again) taken makes me curious about something. This is a question I have posed two or three times now, in this thread and over in the "How we deal with death" thread, and unless I missed it, it's never gotten a real answer.

To Lynx, in particular, but really, to anyone who is so unhappy with Janeway's death that it would cause them to stop reading the books, to essentially boycott Trek until the death is reversed (so note, this question doesn't really apply to anyone who has said they are unhappy or even furious over Janeway's death, but still read/are planning to read Full Circle and other new books to see what happens)... Basically to anyone that has been going beyond simply saying "I don't like that she died" and is instead treating this as a "problem that should be corrected." And that question is:

Do you simply feel that NO main characters should be killed off, ever? And I'm not just talking about in the books, I'm also talking about in the various TV series, as well, since main character death was no more necessary in a TV show than it was in a book. Heck, I'm also saying to broaden this question beyond Trek, and just think about it in general. Would any of you actually be happy reading books (or watching TV shows, or movies, or playing video games with complex stories, etc etc), where you KNEW, for a FACT, that no main characters would die before the end of the story?

I'm just trying to figure this out...
I would, yes. I like feel good stories and I enjoy action/adventure even though I know the main characters won't ever die. TOS was like that. The only death was the nameless ensign or redshirt. Spock's death changed all of that imo, but then they did bring him back. TNG was also safe, up until the death of Tasha Yar, but they brought her back later on as well. Now many here think it's stupid to kill off a character only to bring them back later on. It's not real and it somehow makes the death meaningless. I can understand that point, but my preference is to escape reality and feel good about what I watch or read.

I actually used Voyager and later Voyager fan fiction as an escape during a very tough time in my life. Even as an avid J/Cer I avoided any of the "Die Seven Die" fics because I just didn't want character death. I even read a very moving story, by accident, where Tuvok dies in his effort to bring back Voyager from the Delta Quadrant. It was a great story, but I would have avoided it had I known how it would end. That's just my preference though.

That being said, I'm a huge BSG fan. Why? because the series was set up to expect character death. I knew ahead of time not to get too emotionally involved with any one character because there was a good chance they would be a cylon, bite the bullet by the end, or both. Even with that, I almost stopped watching it when Laura Roslin started getting sick from cancer. That was one storyline that was a little too close to home for me. That series was darker. There was no holographic doctor singing opera, trying to teach a cylon about humanity. There was no Tom Paris tinkering on the holodeck playing Captain Proton. It was a very dramatic show, so you knew what you were getting.

I'll watch a horror movie knowing that most people are going to get hacked up, but I don't expect that to happen in a sitcom. And even in the horror movies I've seen, the main characters usually prevail.
 
I think there is more to be said in the discussion of character death in general, but for the moment, the direction this thread has (again) taken makes me curious about something. This is a question I have posed two or three times now, in this thread and over in the "How we deal with death" thread, and unless I missed it, it's never gotten a real answer.

To Lynx, in particular, but really, to anyone who is so unhappy with Janeway's death that it would cause them to stop reading the books, to essentially boycott Trek until the death is reversed (so note, this question doesn't really apply to anyone who has said they are unhappy or even furious over Janeway's death, but still read/are planning to read Full Circle and other new books to see what happens)... Basically to anyone that has been going beyond simply saying "I don't like that she died" and is instead treating this as a "problem that should be corrected." And that question is:

Do you simply feel that NO main characters should be killed off, ever? And I'm not just talking about in the books, I'm also talking about in the various TV series, as well, since main character death was no more necessary in a TV show than it was in a book. Heck, I'm also saying to broaden this question beyond Trek, and just think about it in general. Would any of you actually be happy reading books (or watching TV shows, or movies, or playing video games with complex stories, etc etc), where you KNEW, for a FACT, that no main characters would die before the end of the story?

I'm just trying to figure this out...


It is not only because the arguments about Janeway`s death are turning in circles, it is also arguments like this one that I find frustrating and annoying.

I have been told sometimes in essence because I am not in favour of killing off “canon” main Star Trek characters that I only want to read happy stories in a nice utopia that makes you feel good about yourself.

As it is usually the case, my answer is “it depends”. A good example is Babylon 5. The death of Kosh was shocking to me and touched me a lot. But I loved that story. It fit so well into the overall story arc and I could live with that decision easily. Marcus, on the other hand, is a different matter. His death was very well written and touching as well but I hated it. I still think that his death was unnecessary and harmed the series.

I am a big fan of “Wildfire”. It is not a story I enjoy and certainly not something I would like to read on a regular basis but I can appreciate that it is very well written and touching. But killing off even a regular non-canon character in books, especially a popular one, is something that should be avoided unless there is really a very, very good reason for it.

My enjoyment of series like Xena and Blake`s 7 is diminished because I know what the endings are like. When I know that the main character dies at the end, especially when that character is my main reason why I watch the series in the first place, I definitely won`t buy any merchandise like DVDs or books afterwards. My husband gave me a book and told me “The main character dies at the end but it is a really good book”. I wasn`t interested. I have more than enough of books to read I am looking forward to.

Knowing in advance that no main character dies in a story is therefore not something that puts me off. What would put me off is if in that series or book which involves a certain amount of danger to the characters nothing bad is allowed to happen to these people. As I keep saying, there is a lot of room between being well and being dead, a lot of room for drama, for change, for character development. I prefer the traumatic and heroic near-death approach to killing off a good and important character, to remove him or her from the series.

By the way, what I hate most is the approach “The series, the story is nearly finished. It doesn`t matter any more – let`s kill off someone in order to give it some realistic touch and shock the audience.”

I am saying that “I don`t like it that she died” but I am definitely not saying “This problem should be corrected.”
 
Two thoughts:

1) In the real world, great people and unknowns die both noble and ignoble deaths alike.

2) Many people feel that in a fictional world, great people should only die noble deaths.

I like to call it Kirk's Syndrome.
 
Well isn't that what makes it fiction? That fact that it's not real? There's also an entertainment factor involved. What exactly entertains you? Reading about a person getting killed because they were hit by a bus, or because they died a heroic death in a great battle. It's just a matter of preference. Back in the 70's Love Story and Brian's Song were top movies. In both those movies, the main characters die. But I personally preferred and loved ET in the 80's where he dies but suddenly and unexpectedly comes back to life. That happens to be my preference.
 
Well isn't that what makes it fiction? That fact that it's not real? There's also an entertainment factor involved. What exactly entertains you? Reading about a person getting killed because they were hit by a bus, or because they died a heroic death in a great battle. It's just a matter of preference. Back in the 70's Love Story and Brian's Song were top movies. In both those movies, the main characters die. But I personally preferred and loved ET in the 80's where he dies but suddenly and unexpectedly comes back to life. That happens to be my preference.

But if you don't have growth and change, you end up with an endless string on anamoly of the week stories. I don't need something where people get killed week in and week out, but after a while I do want to see growth and change. Sometimes change is death.
 
I think there is more to be said in the discussion of character death in general, but for the moment, the direction this thread has (again) taken makes me curious about something. This is a question I have posed two or three times now, in this thread and over in the "How we deal with death" thread, and unless I missed it, it's never gotten a real answer.

To Lynx, in particular, but really, to anyone who is so unhappy with Janeway's death that it would cause them to stop reading the books, to essentially boycott Trek until the death is reversed (so note, this question doesn't really apply to anyone who has said they are unhappy or even furious over Janeway's death, but still read/are planning to read Full Circle and other new books to see what happens)... Basically to anyone that has been going beyond simply saying "I don't like that she died" and is instead treating this as a "problem that should be corrected." And that question is:

Do you simply feel that NO main characters should be killed off, ever? And I'm not just talking about in the books, I'm also talking about in the various TV series, as well, since main character death was no more necessary in a TV show than it was in a book. Heck, I'm also saying to broaden this question beyond Trek, and just think about it in general. Would any of you actually be happy reading books (or watching TV shows, or movies, or playing video games with complex stories, etc etc), where you KNEW, for a FACT, that no main characters would die before the end of the story?

I'm just trying to figure this out...

It's not that I disagree with character death in principle - it's something I really enjoy when done right.

What makes this situation different for me is that it was Janeway.

This is going to sound harsh (and it's necessarily limited by what I've read, which isn't everything), but you wanted to know: I've never gotten that much pleasure out of TrekLit. For a while I bought every book I could, because I was a Trek fan and, you know, brand loyalty and all that. But I never found any of them really gripping. As a whole, I found the plots unsatisfying, the stories thin and predictable, and the writing average at best.

The (close to a hundred) Trek books I had I gave away a couple of years ago, with not a skerrick of regret. TrekLit, for me, has always been made up of "oncer" books. Read once, then discard. It never gives me the read-dozens-of-times-and-only-feel-more-pleasure that I get from people like Salman Rushdie or Mervyn Peake or Peter Hoeg or Angela Carter or Margaret Atwood. Although my favourite genre is SF, my tastes tend towards literary fiction, and most SF tends more towards genre than literature. There are, of course, exceptions. William Gibson, for one. And Orwell's Nineteen Eighty Four is probably the seminal SF story of our time, and gets as close to perfection as I think SF has ever come.

So, as a whole, I find TrekLit unsatisfying. Gradually, I ended up reading less and less, and then it narrowed down even further - to Voyager novels. I only kept reading Trek for Janeway. That was it - even though the writing has been atrocious, and there hasn't been a Voyager book published in the past 10 years that hasn't been, IMO, an utter waste of time and paper, Janeway was what kept me reading. Now she's gone, I've got no incentive to stay with TrekLit. And yes, she's in Full Circle, and no, I don't intend to read it. For one, I'm still too annoyed at the manner of her death. Of all the poor Trek books I've read in my time, Before Dishonour has got to be the worst - and that's saying something. For another, TrekLit has used up all my "trust-value" - after the past decade of Voyager stories, I no longer have much faith in Pocket's capability to produce anything that I consider worth reading. Yes, some people will like Full Circle. But a lot of those will have liked Before Dishonour. If so: knock yourself out! Opinions are mostly going to be subjective on this anyway - some will love these books, and some won't. I don't begrudge others' enjoyment, but I think it's fruitless to pretend that we share the same literary taste.

So for me, if it helps to answer your question at all: it's not death-fic that has stopped me reading Trek. It's killing off the only thing that kept me interested in Trek that has stopped me reading Trek.

So, why do I continue to moan? you ask. As I'm sure some of you are... :p

Because I'd like to read good Trek. I really would - I don't want to hate it. But I have limited reading time, and so I choose to spend that reading time on things that I like, or new authors doing new and interesting things.

I'm afraid I've just grown away from the space opera part of SF.
 
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Well isn't that what makes it fiction? That fact that it's not real? There's also an entertainment factor involved. What exactly entertains you? Reading about a person getting killed because they were hit by a bus, or because they died a heroic death in a great battle. It's just a matter of preference. Back in the 70's Love Story and Brian's Song were top movies. In both those movies, the main characters die. But I personally preferred and loved ET in the 80's where he dies but suddenly and unexpectedly comes back to life. That happens to be my preference.

But if you don't have growth and change, you end up with an endless string on anamoly of the week stories. I don't need something where people get killed week in and week out, but after a while I do want to see growth and change. Sometimes change is death.
OK, I can accept that, but the death of the main character is a little over the top imo. They could have also met and lost various aliens along the way and some humans could have even decided to stay behind due to perhaps a romance or something. Growth and change doesn't have to be all gloom and doom either.
 
Well... lots of interesting responses for me to address. *cracks knuckles*
No, I have never stated that NO main character should be killed off, ever. There might be reasons where it's necessary, I mean if you watch "Titanic" then it is supposed that the main characters, well at least many of them are going to die.
But that's completely different. "Titanic" was a movie based on a real event about a cruise ship that sank, killing many of those aboard. Obviously lots of people are going to die. Granted, I didn't specify, but I really meant purely fiction, and specifically, fiction that involves the characters of the story being put in danger on a regular basis (mortal danger, fairly often), like Trek does.
But when it comes to series like Star Trek, I think that it would only happen during very specific circumstances and "the Janeway case" is definitely not such a case.
Ok. So what, then, makes "the Janeway case" different or special? Is it just cause it was Janeway, and she was a personal favorite? If so (and some have indicated that yes, it was as simple as that), that's perfectly fine. For me personally, the death of one main - even a favorite - wouldn't be enough to drive me away like that, but that's just me.
The reason I asked this is to try and get a sense of why you seem to feel that Janeway's death was wrong. A mistake that needs correcting, as I put it before. Weather you realize it or not, Lynx, your posts have frequently gone way beyond just trying to get across your opinion; you seem to lack the ability to process the notion that for some people, Janeway's death is fine, that accepting said death doesn't mean we want Trek to suddenly spiral into this dark pit of despair and destruction. I'm just trying to figure out why you can't accept that there are perfectly valid reasons to be ok with Janeway's death.
^^
Tasha Yar was killed off because the actress wanted to quit.
Not really. If a character is killed off, then of course the actor cannot continue on the show. But the reverse is not true. An actor leaving does not mean that the character NEEDS to die. When a character does die, it's cause the producers decided to take advantage of the fact that the actor left to try and tell a story revolving around that character's death, which is obviously something they don't get to do very often (Tasha, Jadzia). But just cause an actor is taking off, doesn't mean the character must be killed (Kes, Dr. Crusher after season 1).
I would, yes. I like feel good stories and I enjoy action/adventure even though I know the main characters won't ever die. TOS was like that. The only death was the nameless ensign or redshirt. Spock's death changed all of that imo, but then they did bring him back. TNG was also safe, up until the death of Tasha Yar, but they brought her back later on as well. Now many here think it's stupid to kill off a character only to bring them back later on. It's not real and it somehow makes the death meaningless. I can understand that point, but my preference is to escape reality and feel good about what I watch or read.
I can respect that you would enjoy a story more with that knowledge. I personally don't really agree, but I can certainly respect it. I personally feel that what you described about TOS was one of that show's weaknesses,that week after week, random background people would be killed due to the extreme danger the ship & crew found themselves in, yet our heroes would always come through unscathed. Of course, neither the books nor the shows can go around killing off a main every two weeks or something, just to balance things out; that'd be ridiculous. A more immediate solution is to be more careful about just how often and in what ways random redshirts (or goldshirts, as the case may be) bite it. And quite frankly, I could make a whole other post about my feelings on how death is portrayed/handled for non-main characters. But I won't put all that in now; this post is already going to be another mini-novel. :rolleyes: Anyway, it is partly for this reason that I feel having main characters die on occasion is fine, when handled properly. It's important sometimes to show that with all this dangerous stuff they go through, these mortal characters sometimes don't make it through. They are, afterall, no less mortal than the redshirts.
And I understand that some here simply feel that Janeway's death in Before Dishonor wasn't handled well. I thought it was, but that - again - is just a matter of opinion.
It is not only because the arguments about Janeway`s death are turning in circles, it is also arguments like this one that I find frustrating and annoying.

I have been told sometimes in essence because I am not in favour of killing off “canon” main Star Trek characters that I only want to read happy stories in a nice utopia that makes you feel good about yourself.
Well, it is not my intention to be frustrating, nor annoying. If I have been, then I apologize. I will say that I'm more than certain that there are a number of people (on all sides of this debate) who have been frustrated or annoyed at times.
Now, as to the part I bolded, I find this a very interesting comment. Allow me to paraphrase it to make a point:
"I have been told sometimes in essence because I am ok with killing off Janeway or other "canon" main Star Trek characters that I only want to read dark stories in some kind of corrupted, un-Trek like twisted universe wherer everything is dark and horrible."
Note that I am not accusing you specifically of saying such a thing Baerbel, but your comment provided the perfect way for me to address that. Certainly it's something that Lynx has been saying over and over since this debate began (a point I was not going to bring up again after Lynx said he was done with the debate a few pages ago; however, since he's back...)
Once again, there is a middle ground. This entire situation is gray, not black and white, which is entirely the point I have been trying to make.
There are valid reasons for a person to think that Janeway's death sucked, or that main characters should not be killed in general, and for that person to decide that they are not going to read the books anymore, at least until and unless she comes back. That's fine.
There are valid reasons for a person to think that Janeway's death was just fine, and that killing off TV mains is ok under the right circumstances. Those people may be very interested to see what happens in books like Full Circle, and are going to continue to read the books. That's fine too.
What's not fine is this idea that Janeway's death is WRONG. That it was an error. No one is saying that those of you who don't like it should like it, or anything like that (well, ok... I'M not saying that, anyway. I won't speak for others, but I would assume no one here is trying to assert that anyone needs to change their personal opinion). All I'm trying to get across is that just because I'm ok with her death, doesn't mean that I'm somehow happy that she died or that I want more main characters to die. I just accept that in this kind of story, sometimes the death of main characters is part of life, and in this particular case, I thought the event was well written and opened up interesting dramatic possibilities, which I'm looking forward to exploring when I finally get around to picking up a copy of Full Circle. If others don't accept that, fine; I may not understand that, but I will respect it. All I'm asking is for the opposite viewpoint to be similarly respected.
As it is usually the case, my answer is “it depends”. A good example is Babylon 5. The death of Kosh was shocking to me and touched me a lot. But I loved that story. It fit so well into the overall story arc and I could live with that decision easily. Marcus, on the other hand, is a different matter. His death was very well written and touching as well but I hated it. I still think that his death was unnecessary and harmed the series.
I agree that it does depend. I also happen to agree with what you said about Kosh's death, but not about Marcus'. When I watched the ep, I thought it sucked, but it didn't take me long to come around to accepting it. My reaction to a main characters death will vary from character to character, show to show (or book to book, or whatever). It certainly wasn't my intention to paint myself as someone who says "All main character death is ok, no matter what", because it CAN absolutely be handled poorly and feel unnecessary. Not a main character exactly, but the first example that came to mind: I thought the manner and timing of Joe Carey's death near the end of Voyager's season 7 was horrible, not to mention the lack of fallout afterward. To me, his death was stupid and unecessary.
By the way, what I hate most is the approach “The series, the story is nearly finished. It doesn`t matter any more – let`s kill off someone in order to give it some realistic touch and shock the audience.”
Now this I agree with. In fact, that is preciesly how I felt about Carey's death.
 
To Lynx, in particular, but really, to anyone who is so unhappy with Janeway's death that it would cause them to stop reading the books, to essentially boycott Trek until the death is reversed (so note, this question doesn't really apply to anyone who has said they are unhappy or even furious over Janeway's death, but still read/are planning to read Full Circle and other new books to see what happens)... Basically to anyone that has been going beyond simply saying "I don't like that she died" and is instead treating this as a "problem that should be corrected." And that question is:

Well, I'm not planning any boycott, but I do look on this as a problem that should be fixed, and promptly, so...

Do you simply feel that NO main characters should be killed off, ever? And I'm not just talking about in the books, I'm also talking about in the various TV series, as well, since main character death was no more necessary in a TV show than it was in a book.

Not at all. I am saying, however, that if you're going to kill off a main character, you need (A) a damn good reason to do so; and (B) a really good story (and, naturally, execution thereof), which usually involves the character dying well and/or in a moving fashion. Janeway's situation lacks all of the above.

Would any of you actually be happy reading books (or watching TV shows, or movies, or playing video games with complex stories, etc etc), where you KNEW, for a FACT, that no main characters would die before the end of the story?

I'd say, why even bother making such a statement? That's the situation, de facto if rarely de jure, most of the time. Actually coming out and saying it would be tacky, but it wouldn't change much of anything. I never thought Janeway or anybody else was going to bite the bullet in any of their adventures of the week; seeing if the characters would escape whatever peril they fall into was never the point of watching the series because you know they will, ninety-nine times out of a hundred (if not more). Ideally, a show or series ought to strike a balance between consistency and suspense, but if I had no other choice than to know, for a FACT, that no main characters would die and the bullshit that was Before Dishonor...? I would choose the former, because it doesn't affect, or affects only marginally, my enjoyment of the product, whereas the latter is a complete downer from which I derive no enjoyment whatsoever.

1) In the real world, great people and unknowns die both noble and ignoble deaths alike. 2) Many people feel that in a fictional world, great people should only die noble deaths. I like to call it Kirk's Syndrome.

Let's face it: if strict realism is what one desires, then Star Trek--and speculatively fiction more generally--is the wrong product for you. Conceitless media are called 'documentaries', and even there, you're probably better off looking out the window to avoid editorial bias. This is, after all, a show about a better humanity, that has conquered prejudice and want and superstition, built massive starships capable of casually traveling at faster than light speeds to numberless habitable worlds with sentient species that look just like us except for a few bumps and who we can interbreed with and understand perfectly thanks to our universal translators, etc, etc. None of which is realistic, but one suspends disbelief because without it the product simply wouldn't be the same. Forsaking one of the most critical elements of that vision--the optimistic view of the future, without which Trek is just another space opera--in order to pointlessly butcher one of your leading characters... Well. My opinion on that is clear.

But as to this notion of noble deaths--I argued, previously in this thread, why I think heroic deaths are preferable. It occured to me, thinking about it later, that I'm not really bothered by the idea of characters not dying heroically if it's beyond their timeframe. The 'suggestions', if you will, from IaMD, that Archer passes away of natural causes shortly after the inauguration of Kirk's Enterprise doesn't bother me at all, nor that Sato was one of Kodos' victims. It wouldn't bother me if McCoy keeled over in one of the current books, or if Picard were to die--many decades hence--from complications related to Irumodic Syndrome rather than in some blaze of glory (in fact, I think there might be something thematically appropriate about the most humane character succumbing to a common frailty like illness). A noble death is really if the story of a character's life ends premuturely--that there should be something meaningful there to make up for all the chapters that will go unwritten. Janeway was an interesting character whose journey, adventures, possibilities were pointlessly cut short. Really, when I get down to it, I don't think I'm believe unreasonable at all; my opposition is pretty specific to situations like this one, or Tucker in TatV.

Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
 
Well isn't that what makes it fiction? That fact that it's not real? There's also an entertainment factor involved. What exactly entertains you? Reading about a person getting killed because they were hit by a bus, or because they died a heroic death in a great battle. It's just a matter of preference. Back in the 70's Love Story and Brian's Song were top movies. In both those movies, the main characters die. But I personally preferred and loved ET in the 80's where he dies but suddenly and unexpectedly comes back to life. That happens to be my preference.

But if you don't have growth and change, you end up with an endless string on anamoly of the week stories. I don't need something where people get killed week in and week out, but after a while I do want to see growth and change. Sometimes change is death.
OK, I can accept that, but the death of the main character is a little over the top imo. They could have also met and lost various aliens along the way and some humans could have even decided to stay behind due to perhaps a romance or something. Growth and change doesn't have to be all gloom and doom either.

Well, logically a character's actions stem from the traits you establish for your characters. Plots stem from the actions of the established character in a given situation, and the unfolding of the plot is based on the way the characters react to situation after situation. Therefore, a character's death should be appropriate both from a character and a plot perspective. It should not be beholden to any requirement of enjoyability or nobility unless enjoyability is the primary goal of your story, which, IMO, makes for a boring story.

That said, when a character's death does not result from this type of dramatic flow, and is done for arbitrary reasons, it should be characterized as a stunt. The same logical and dramatic disservice is done even when a character survives despite the dramatic 'need' for them to die.

To those on both sides of the aisle in the Janeway argument, I ask you to honestly assess which of these criteria Janeways' death meets, and which criteria her 'resurrection' would meet.
 
Well, there's no doubt that her 'resurrection' would result in her death being considered a "stunt," but frankly I don't care what you call it, I'd still rather have her back. To me Voyager was her ship and her series, period. I think my frustration lies in the timing of it all as well. We Voyager fans have basically had 4 mediocre relaunch novels, with the crew relatively scattered and new characters that I didn't really care for. Now there's a book with one last adventure that will include Janeway and then she bites the dust. I'm sorry, as a Janeway and Voyager fan I can't help but feel jipped. The only solace is that from what I understand, Full Circle really is good, so maybe that last adventure makes it all worth it. I really can't say and right now I just don't have the stomach to read it.
 
Do you simply feel that NO main characters should be killed off, ever? And I'm not just talking about in the books, I'm also talking about in the various TV series, as well, since main character death was no more necessary in a TV show than it was in a book. Heck, I'm also saying to broaden this question beyond Trek, and just think about it in general. Would any of you actually be happy reading books (or watching TV shows, or movies, or playing video games with complex stories, etc etc), where you KNEW, for a FACT, that no main characters would die before the end of the story?

I'm just trying to figure this out...
As long as it's done for a good reason, and actually serves a purpose in the story, or is at least interesting, I have no problem whatsoever with main characters dying. But I do hate it when shows/movies/books kill someone off just for the hell of it, and IMO if you decide that the only way to make the story interesting is to kill somone off, like Trip in TATV, (or maybe Data in Nem. I'm not really sure where that one falls in these categories). Although TBH sometimes these can actually still be done well enough to be put into the first category (my best example is Dargo in Farscape: The Peacekeeper Wars).
As for being able to enjoy a story even if I know a/the main character will die, as long as the story is good I can still enjoy it, and even have on many occaisions. In fact, sometimes this will even make me want to see something even more (although it has to be something I wanted to see pretty badly already), for instance I am very curious to see what
will lead up the the Tenth Doctor's Regeneration in the last of this year's/next year's Doctor Who specials.
 
To those on both sides of the aisle in the Janeway argument, I ask you to honestly assess which of these criteria Janeways' death meets, and which criteria her 'resurrection' would meet.

Stunt death. But as any resurrection would also be a stunt resurrection, IMO, it's six of one and half a dozen of the other. ;)
 
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