It's not nonsense, it's just that you fail to see the perspective where I'm arguing from.
Which is fine, since Lucas de-canonized the entire EU nearly a year ago.
This forum, along with all the others on this page, are about Star Trek, so please try to keep them Star Wars-free.
Lazy? Hardly. This is me we're talking about. Christopher L. Bennett. I'm obsessive about detail. I'm the guy who invented the idea of Star Trek novel annotations.
DigificWriter said:The company's official canon policy states point-blank that higher levels of canon (i.e. the 'T Canon' that comprises the material from The Clone Wars TV series [both of them], The Clone Wars movie, and the still-forthcoming live-action television series) cancel out or override lower levels of canon (i.e. the 'C Canon' into which Traviss' novels fall).
I like consistency because I treat the Star Trek universe as another reality that exists alongisde the one I am a part of.
By "the masses", I mean anyone who is okay with changing the lives of the people who are part of the Star Trek universe.
Dayton Ward;3886547[I said:Star Trek[/I] and pretty much every other media property has the exact same policy with regards to their tie-ins, only they use simpler language: "Canon," and "not canon."
That's part of the reason. But there's a more fundamental reason than that. The tie-ins aren't canon because they aren't created by the same people who make the show. The concept is theirs; anyone licensed to do adaptations of it is simply borrowing it. Now, maybe that line is vaguer in a case like ST, which has had so many producers and showrunners, than in a case like Babylon 5 or Buffy/Angel where there's a single clear "owner" of the creation. But the principle is the same.
Valid in what sense? Yes, the various tie-ins are all obligated to acknowledge and conform to one another (albeit glossing over the contradictions that exist), and the onscreen material does borrow a lot of ideas and characters from them, but it also ignores and contradicts them without hesitation. Just last month, The Clone Wars did a 3-episode Mandalore arc that, I gather, invalidated a whole multi-book series of popular Star Wars novels by an author named Karen Traviss.
So "just as valid?" Not at all. The tie-ins are a source of ideas for the canon, but are not binding upon it.
It's their show. It's their creation and their right to make whatever choices they want. We're just borrowing their toys. So they're free to use, ignore, or contradict anything we come up with. If you go to your friend's house and they let you play with the big toy-railroad diorama in their basement, that doesn't mean they're sharing ownership of the trains with you. It doesn't mean you have a right to tell them how to rearrange the tracks or the miniature houses, or that you can make such changes without their permission, no matter how cool your ideas are. If they like a suggestion you make and choose to incorporate it, that would be a gratifying bonus, but that doesn't make it something you should expect as an entitlement, and it doesn't make it wrong if they choose to do something different instead. Because you have no entitlement to something that belongs to somebody else.
I think it's also worth pointing out that things like Star Wars, are very much the exception to the rule when it comes "canon", pretty much all of the other franchises treat the tie-ins like Trek does. In fact, there is actually alot more continuity in Trek now, than there is in most of the other franchises. In most of them the stories are pretty much just standalones, like the old Trek books. So really, I think we should all just be happy with the continuity that we are getting now.
Part of what I grew to love about Star Wars (and post-Crisis DC, and Trek) was how the fans themselves were invited into the story to try to reconcile the apparent contradictions (caused by Writer B not having read Writer A's book). This only served to add new details into the ever-evolving tapestry --which spawned more errors, and resulted in more "patches" growing over them. It's like a vast, organic, ongoing work of collective art.
Lazy? Hardly. This is me we're talking about. Christopher L. Bennett. I'm obsessive about detail. I'm the guy who invented the idea of Star Trek novel annotations. I'm the guy who actually took photos of enlarged freeze-frames of the rec-deck scene on the ST:TMP DVD and based characters in Ex Machina on the extras -- and then made a whole reference page for the photos on my website. I'm the guy who used my photo-processing program to enhance a screen grab from "The Battle" and pored over a blurry passage of text from an onscreen Okudagram so I could quote it in The Buried Age as a log entry -- and then e-mailed Mike Okuda to ask if he could clarify a couple of words I still wasn't sure of. I'm the guy who filled my sink with water and tossed my Micro Machines Stargazer into it over and over again to test if my idea for what would happen when the Stargazer hit a gas giant's atmosphere was credible. If that constitutes being lazy when it comes to continuity and detail, I shudder to think what diligence would look like.
So when someone like me talks about recognizing that there's more to storytelling than rigorous attention to detail, that's Nixon going to China. I'm not saying it because I'm too lazy to care, I'm saying it because I recognize it's true even though it goes against my natural impulses. Yes, continuity and consistency are nice, but we're not writing textbooks or scholarly papers here, we're writing works of entertainment. The priority is the quality of the story. Consistency and accuracy are part of that, sure, but there are times when other priorities override them. There are a lot of different things you have to weigh against each other when constructing a work of fiction, and if it's a choice between compromising on the quality or emotional impact of the story and compromising on some trivial detail... well, it should be obvious which one takes priority.
What I object to is this cavalier attitude I'm seeing towards even bothering to keep things straight, on the stance that somehow this Great American Star Trek Novel that's being presented is all the justification that's needed for ignoring established continuity.
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