In a message dated 2/21/01 3:58:06 AM Eastern Standard Time,
N.Faulkner(a)tesco.net writes:
<<
Plenty of reserve, dignity, and respect there, I'm sure you'll agree. >>
Well, I wasn't going to say anything... but what he said. I take exception to
the statement that the British have more "reserve, dignity and respect" than
Americans. Talk about a broad generalization! I love visiting England and I
think it's a wonderful country... and there are many things about it that are
much better (in my eyes) than America... but the reverse is also true. There
are many things *here* in American that are better than in other countries,
including England. And "reserve, dignity and respect" exists in both
countries (not to mention many other countries, as well). Of course, there
are those models of British reserve, dignity and respect on Red Dwarf we can
always point to... ;-)
*Are* the Blakes 7 characters "British"? Well, personally, I don't think so.
At least not all of them. If we follow that train of thought than the vast
majority of spacegoers in the Star Trek Federation universe are *American*.
The vast number of humanoids *and* aliens on Babylon 5 are mostly *American*.
Even Xena and Hercules were *American* because, although the actors aren't
American and the show isn't filmed in America, the actors mostly speak with
American accents for an American audience. In fact, many "American" shows are
now filmed in Canada. So, Scully and Mulder and the whole FBI must have been
Canadian! (They are now "American" because the show moved operations to LA, I
believe.) Hmmm, Farscape is filmed in New Zealand, isn't it? So, are all of
the characters on Farscape originally from New Zealand?
Even if we want to extrapolate that many of the B7 characters were meant to
be "British" in the far future, who's to say that the *behavior* of people
that far in the future will be the same when it comes to emotions or
*anything*? Hundreds of years ago in England, did people think and talk the
same way that they do today?
And taking it even further, just how much of the characters' lives did we get
to see? Not much, really. This is why so many fans find fan fiction appealing
in the first place: the ability to take the characters and the situations in
different directions and to explore all different kinds of things, including
emotions.
It seems to really bother some British fans when American fans want to
participate in the fandom in this manner and I can only say sorry. A fan is a
fan and if they feel motivated to write in their danged old American way, too
bad. Don't read American fan fiction if it really bugs you that much.
Annie