I've been a Star Trek fan for40 years now, so don't get me wrong when I say this: They're just books. I'm not going to waste brainpower pining for canonicity.
Some fans refuse to let go of the Old Canon in SWEU.
There's a Legends/Nu Canon merging thread on TheForce.net
One thing I will say is I think the Star Trek: Novelverse has become almost impenetrable to outsiders. Is there any chance we can get an Essential Chronology ala the Star Wars one listing the basic events of the books and maybe a general history of Star Trek series? I think that would really help people get a better sense of what's going on with things like the Typhon Pact, Borg, and so on.
I tend to agree that this is what will happen with Star Wars, and it even has precedent within the EU itself: back in the Nineties, the official line was that the original Marvel comics weren't canon, but more and more references to it popped up in other EU works until it was eventually incorporated after all.That could still end up being the de facto standard. The new canon is still allowed to reference material from the Legends EU.* Both replacement and reintroduction of EU material has already happened, but down the line, with such a wealth of material, I'd be very surprised if much of it wasn't reintroduced by creators with a soft-spot for one piece of older material or another (or writers doing technical books who don't want the next edition of "The Essential Guide to Ships/Planets/Weapons" and so on to be a pamphlet compared to the doorstoppers that were the EU-inclusive versions. Look at poor Wookiepedia, where the "Legends" entries are masterpieces of wiki-ness, and the "Canon" entries are mostly barely more than stubs). As you say, toys and video game backstories have already started using Legends to fill out now-lacking background detail.
I don't know if anyone at Lucasfilm is officially planning this, but the "Legends" banner conveniently allows them to create new stories in that EU, if and when someone wants to put them out there alongside stories in the current canon. Star Wars already had the "Infinities" banner beforehand for non-canon works, so this would work very similarly.*Incidentally, how ballsy is it to reprint a bunch of books right after saying they don't count, with THIS DOESN'T COUNT printed right on the cover? A lot of franchises would just pretend the old stuff never existed, not say "Now that there's a new movie coming out, read a totally different story of what might've happened after the OT. And also read the actual story of what happened after the OT, coming summer, 2015, in inexplicable present-tense."
I tend to agree that this is what will happen with Star Wars, and it even has precedent within the EU itself: back in the Nineties, the official line was that the original Marvel comics weren't canon, but more and more references to it popped up in other EU works until it was eventually incorporated after all.
I don't know if anyone at Lucasfilm is officially planning this, but the "Legends" banner conveniently allows them to create new stories in that EU, if and when someone wants to put them out there alongside stories in the current canon. Star Wars already had the "Infinities" banner beforehand for non-canon works, so this would work very similarly.
Comic books are a terrible example to use, as most major comic book properties (DC, Marvel, and even TMNT and The Transformers) already have in-story explanations for alternate versions of characters which make all of them "count."
Google Groups searchability isn't what it used to be, but I've previously posted examples in other threads of Usenet posts from the Eighties talking about Star Trek canon in this way which predate anything Richard Arnold did. It's factually false to keep perpetuating the notion that he affected how fans talk about canonicity.
If anything, that's a case of the tail wagging the dog. Arnold did what he did because fans were already concerned about canon, and Lucasfilm marketed (and continues to market) their tie-ins as canonical for the same reason. There'd be no reason to do either if the perceived value of such weren't already there, and I don't actually know how a content-creator could make fans care about it if they didn't beforehand.
Yeah, the "multiverse" idea. Also used by the Ben 10 franchise on Cartoon Network; episodes of the later shows have retroactively established the two live-action TV movies as being set in an alternate timeline, and its crossover with Generator Rex was justified in the same way. It's also implicitly used in Doctor Who tie-ins to justify the various incompatible continuities of books, comics, audios, etc. (not to mention the continuity errors in the show itself).
The SW canon always seemed like a farce to me, since George Lucas said the concept was based on how Star Trek treated it's tie-ins!Star Wars literature has had the blessing of being considered canon for decades now, and was pretty much demolished by a single movie (full disclosure, I've never read any of it). And yet, Star Trek lit takes such care to stay true to the timeline(s), even retconning when new stuff comes out, but it is not considered canon. Thoughts?
^They probably assume canon status means it's a lot more consistent with how the characters were portrayed in the show and/or with the show's creators' visions of what happened before or after the show (the latter being of some interest in itself, especially if they really like the creator's scripts and ideas, and also indicating it's a lot less likely to be contradicted if there is a revival).
But the only way it's really going to be guaranteed to be consistent with the creators' vision is if the creators themselves either write it or plot and edit it.
^They probably assume canon status means it's a lot more consistent with how the characters were portrayed in the show and/or with the show's creators' visions of what happened before or after the show (the latter being of some interest in itself, especially if they really like the creator's scripts and ideas, and also indicating it's a lot less likely to be contradicted if there is a revival).
Some fans refuse to let go of the Old Canon in SWEU.
There's a Legends/Nu Canon merging thread on TheForce.net
And you know that's a 'for the fun of it' project Charles!
Oh, a doppelganger, hmm? One with a beard perhaps? (Come to think of it, this would explain your new found allegiance to the First Order.) (If you haven't read 'em, I do recommend the Mack double bill of Sorrows of Empire / Rise Like Lions)
One thing I will say is I think the Star Trek: Novelverse has become almost impenetrable to outsiders...
I dunno. I think the people who'd say it was inpenetrable are unlikely to pick up the books in the first place.
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