From: Lisa Williams lcw@dallas.net
Fiona Moore wrote:
Exactly how *do* you regard canon, then?
I regard it as what we literally saw and heard on the show itself. Explanations of *why* so-and-so did such-and-such, what he was thinking or feeling, are interpretation, not canon.
But by that analysis, you're removing the explanations within the show itself. We see Avon in prison at the beginning of RoD, for instance. Later on we learn why he is in prison; we also get some idea of what he was feeling at the time. Would you then say that the only thing you'd accept as canon is the image of Avon in prison, with no explanation?
If Blake reveals in the series that he is 34 at the time of "Breakdown", I may go away and write a story saying that he's 55 at the same time-- but it's not going to fit the canon, however good a story it is.
Well, if you came up with some reason for him to have *said* that he's 34, it would fit the canon because it would not contradict what happened on the show
No, to use Neil's terminology, it would be subcanonical. Canon is what happens on the show; subcanon is an intepretation not stated in the show but which would not contradict it, noncanon is something which goes against the canon. The argument here is not about "fitting" or "not fitting," or what sort of clever explanation one can come up with, but about what *is* on the screen.
-- Blake said that he's 34. If you wrote a story where he
actually *said*, at that point, that he was 55, then *that* would contradict canon and would hence be striking out into AU territory.
Agreed. Which is exactly my problem with slash. No visual evidence to support the characters' homo- or bisexuality occurs on the screen (see below for more, and why it is not inconceivable that, had the creators wished the characters to be seen as such, it could have been portrayed), therefore, to claim that it is present is to contradict canon.
Just because you can cite canon for something doesn't mean the citation can withstand argument.
And coming up with an alternate explanation which you find more convincing doesn't mean that someone else's is invalid, either. Yours may not be more convincing to everyone, and it's still an *explanation* -- an interpretation.
I'm afraid I have to point out that there *is* actually a difference between "explanation" and "interpretation." To wit: "Avon allowed himself to be captured so as to locate Shrinker" is an explanation. "Avon felt terribly nervous throughout the whole interrogation process" is an interpretation.
And interpretations vary between individuals. Some
will be convincing to many more people than others, but there isn't a vote to determine one "correct" interpretation to which everyone is obligated to subscribe. No matter how much you support your own version, no matter how obviously "right" it seems to you, other people are *still* going to receive different impressions.
Shane's right, you know, you *are* sounding like Annie. I feel no particular feelings as to the rightness or wrongness of the principal characters being heterosexual; had they in fact shown homosexual interest onscreen, I would be overjoyed (while positive portrayals of gays do occur in 1970s media, one or two more wouldn't have hurt). But in terms of what is there on our screens, I am forced to admit that it isn't there.
which can be both inferred from scenes in which the dialogue says that sexual interest is meant to be shown and extrapolated from there onto other scenes
"Inferred from." "Extrapolated." These are what I mean by personal interpretation.
Well, they may be what *you* mean by them, but they actually have a specific usage in literary/media studies. In a visual medium like television or theatre, there exist certain dramatic conventions for letting the audience know what the character is supposed to be thinking and feeling without actually resorting to a soliloquy. If you watch a lot of silent films, for instance, you may notice a kind of stereotyped arm-flung-over-face gesture which actors make. This gesture occurs only in scenes where one character is being menaced or threatened by another one. Hence, it has gone down in (been extrapolated into) the visual language of the silent film as a way of conveying fear of attack. This is an inference from the context of the gestures, which consequently is generally accepted as part of the "grammar" of the silent film; you are unlikely to find a book out there entitled "A Viewer's Guide To Silent Film Gestures," but an audience of the time would have understood what was meant by it, as film-studies audiences still do today.
Let's take my "cruisy look" example again. There are scenes-- I can cite them again if you like, but see especially "Breakdown"-- in which the dialogue demonstrates that there is sexual interest between a pair of characters. In those scenes these characters give each other a certain look, running their eyes quickly down the other one's body; this look frequently occurs in scenes in which sexual interest has already been established through dialogue and other physical cues. There are, additionally, two or three other scenes in which nothing is actually *said* to establish sexual interest, but in which the look is there. Now, given that previously that look has only occurred in scenes in which there is an already established sexual interest (it has not, for instance, also occurred in scenes in which there is an established hatred between the characters, which might cause one to question the earlier inference as to the meaning of the gesture), then that look is meant to indicate sexual interest in the three other examples too. No interpretation required; simply looking at what sort of conventionalised gestures exist onscreen to represent sexual interest and when these occur.
"Possibility" and that other word you use, "potential," is a lot different from "canon."
Well, of course -- I was talking about what's being portrayed in fanfic, not about canon. I'm sorry that wasn't clear. Fanfic is an extrapolation from canon, and hence is concerned, by nature, with interpretations, possibilities and potentials *based* on canon.
Forgive me, then, because what I was referring to was my and Betty's discussion about whether or not there was any canonical basis for assuming the principal characters to be homo- or bisexual. And I'm sorry, but *you* referred to it first. As I said in that discussion, in fanfic anything can happen. Blake can be a 1930s mobster; Avon can become a Mormon. Which is why I prefer to keep the discussion off fanfic.
Or, to get back to the slash front: as I said, yes, the slash interpretation can be made, has been made and will be made-- but retconning it back onto our screens is something else entirely.
I don't think I understand the phrase "retconning it back onto our screens". Clarify, please?
Claiming that the characters are gay or bisexual within the series itself, on the basis of the fact that some fanfic out there portrays them as such.
There's a very interesting passage in Bacon-Smith where she describes an older fan introducing a new one to a TV series, with OF talking to NF, telling her how to interpret what's on the screen.
Irrelevant, in my case, both as concerns B7 and my slash perceptions generally. I saw B7 years before I had any contact with other fans, and more years before I knew there was such a thing as slash fanfic for it -- by which time my own perceptions, which were based on my watching the show, all by my lonesome, were long since established. And as far as seeing slash elsewhere, I've been doing that virtually all my life (I can trace it back to age 5, which is about as early as I have coherent memories to draw from),
I'm impressed that you knew what homosexuality was at age 5, I have to say. But the interpretations we make at 5 are not the same ones we make at 25.
and it wasn't until a few years ago that I had any idea other people did, too. That's around three decades of my forming very strong slash-type impressions, without any other fans telling me what to think.
It's remarkable that you've managed to avoid any contact with fandom for thirty-odd years... But now that you've found it, you *have* found support for the expression of your views from fellow fans, that is the point. Supposing you had formed these strong impressions on your own, and become convinced by them. And then when you went into fandom, and when you expressed these views, your newfound friends reacted with scorn and ridicule. This wouldn't change your views necessarily, but it would mean that you would keep them to yourself. But just because you're not the only one to make an interpretation doesn't necessarily mean it has a factual basis. Quite a number of cultures independently concluded that the sun went around the Earth, after all.
Never said you were, but I'm also saying, 1) there is canon, and 2) that your interpretation is made within a particular social context.
I agree with both of those points -- though it sounded from the preceding paragraph like you might be making some mistaken assumptions about my own social context.
Um, no. You're a fan (an American one to judge by your e-mail address); you have been on this lyst for at least as long as I have; you have contact with other fandoms (judging by a quick look at your websites); you are posting your messages to Lysator as a whole. From which I was inferring that your expression of your views was affected by your presence in fandom, which I would find it difficult to believe was not the case, even if you were not introduced to B7 in the same way as Bacon-Smith's informant.
Your interpretation, too, is made within *your* social context.
Which appears to be the same one as yours, with one or two small differences (I live in the UK and am active in Doctor Who fandom rather than Manga fandom when I'm not on the lyst). B7 fandom, in short.
If you'd like to play the game with me, you yourself can try and come up with a hard-evidence example of same-sex sexual interest by one of the principal characters on B7.
I don't understand at all what you're getting at here. There are lots of moments which strike me as slashy (forgive the shorthand), which probably *wouldn't* strike you that way, and which *canonically* consisted of, e.g., two characters looking at each other.
But how, that is the point? How? Is the look hostile? Cruisy? In what other contexts do looks like that one occur-- when two characters are about to fight, or to make love? I'm not talking here about what "strikes" someone one way or the other; I'm talking about how the look compares to other looks in the series, and what we know about its intent from the dialogue and activity that surrounds it.
Most, if not all, of them have undoubtedly been cited in the course of previous discussions.
Very probably, which makes me wonder why you want to rehash it all here.
I
don't know what you mean by a "hard-evidence example"; if you're asking for a mad, passionate clinch between two same-sex characters, we both know there wasn't such a thing in the series, so why ask?
I am looking for an example of a gesture of sexual interest between same-sex characters, analogous to the opposite-sex gestures of sexual interest cited above in the "Breakdown" case for Jenna and Dr Renor, or elsewhere, those between Vila and Kerril, or Avon and Anna. Now, such gestures of sexual interest *do* occur between same-sex characters within the series: for instance, Carnell and the staff officer, or Krantor and Toise. But they are not made by any of the principals, either to each other or to a one-off character.
What is the object of this "game"?
To find visual or dialogic evidence from canon of a homosexual interest on the part of the principal characters of B7.
I'm missing something here, and I have an uneasy feeling you're assuming that I'm making some kind of claim that I'm *not* making... (I'm afraid Harriet may be quite right about alien mindsets.)
And therefore, because you can't see my point of view, my argument isn't worth listening to?
My comment was stating, very clearly and
specifically, that fictional characters will be interpreted in different ways by different people, with no one interpretation being the single "correct" one.
But that isn't actually what you said. You said, and I quote, "there is no One True Way." Hence my reaction, which would have been different had you said the line above.
I believe taking it completely out of context to imply an "anything goes" attitude toward human actions, with gratuitous dragging in of a Nazi reference,
I mentioned Nazis, as I frequently do, not particularly because I want to imply Ultimate Evil (and I think it's quite possible to argue that Good and Evil are not absolute concepts) or make an unassailable argument, but because I am currently up to my eyes in historical works on the Nazi period. If I were writing a paper on the Sudan, I could have brought that in as an example and the comparison would still read. The reference was not gratuitous; in fact, as someone who has studied Germany for over four years now, and who has family members who escaped Nazi persecution by the skin of their teeth, I find it a bit offensive to suggest that I'd simply bring them in to score a cheap point.
Well, I guess that's that, then. Thread over, thanks for playing.
I've been trying to stay civil, but frankly I don't much like being patronised.
Fiona
The Posthumous Memoirs of Secretary Rontane Available for public perusal at http://nyder.r67.net
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Fiona Moore wrote:
But by that analysis, you're removing the explanations within the show itself.
Sorry, that was indeed unclear. I should have been more specific and said "viewer-generated explanations."
No, to use Neil's terminology, it would be subcanonical.
But you had asked me how *I* regard canon. In the example you cited, I would regard as canon the fact that Blake said he was 34. Whether he really was, or why he would say so if he wasn't, is not canon (provided we aren't given any other canonical information on the subject.)
I feel no particular feelings as to the rightness or wrongness of the principal characters being heterosexual;
I was not using "right" in the sense of morality, but in the sense of validity or correctness.
Claiming that the characters are gay or bisexual within the series itself, on the basis of the fact that some fanfic out there portrays them as such.
If by "claiming that the characters are gay or bisexual" you mean claiming that they were portrayed that way, by the conglomeration of people who contribute to the existence of a TV character before it reaches the viewer, then I'd agree that it is highly unlikely that they did so. (I can't pretend to know for sure, since I don't have insight into what they were all thinking. But I'd be inclined to doubt it ever occurred to most of them.) This does not, however, change the fact that they may be *perceived* that way by a viewer. The character is not created entirely by its authors; the reader or viewer contributes to the mix as well, which is why we all see the same character in different ways -- sometimes *very* different.
I'm impressed that you knew what homosexuality was at age 5, I have to say.
Well, I didn't, in a technical sense. But from what I've read about childhood development, it's pretty normal to be having romantic fantasies by age 5 (things like sexual orientation and identity often start to be discernible by then), and mine were invariably about male/male relationships.
But the interpretations we make at 5 are not the same ones we make at 25.
Oh, I've become considerably more sophisticated in my interpretations over the years -- but the basic instinct remains the same. Be rather surprising if that had changed, really; given how early and how strongly it appeared, I suspect it's hard-coded.
It's remarkable that you've managed to avoid any contact with fandom for thirty-odd years...
It wasn't a question of avoidance; it simply didn't cross my path. It probably never would have, had it not been for the development of online fora for fan discussions, and those are a comparatively recent phenomenon, after all.
But just because you're not the only one to make an interpretation doesn't necessarily mean it has a factual basis. Quite a number of cultures independently concluded that the sun went around the Earth, after all.
An individual perception of a fictional character isn't quite the same thing as an objective reality. In the latter, given two mutually contradictory proposals, they can't both be true. In the former, they can, because there are as many different "realities" as there are percipients. The Blake who exists in my head is not the same as the one who exists in yours -- but they both have an equal claim to their "existence", because we each have a concept of the character. They came from the same root, but diverged when they reached us, the viewers, because we each contribute a different set of elements to the final picture.
Which appears to be the same one as yours, with one or two small differences
I would have thought the differences were fairly radical, judging from your previous comments. We seem to have very different backgrounds and approaches to the whole idea of watching a TV show. A small overlap in the highly specific area of B7 fandom (or some aspects thereof) is just a fragment of the whole social context, for either of us.
But how, that is the point? How? Is the look hostile? Cruisy?
Well, since I've seen one look from one moment in the show being given diametrically opposed meanings by different viewers, I doubt whether you're going to get a unanimous decision about "how". An expression with any subtlety at all can be interpreted multiple ways even in real life, let alone when it's on a fictional character in a TV show.
Very probably, which makes me wonder why you want to rehash it all here.
Er, I don't, which is why I didn't.
for instance, Carnell and the staff officer,
I never could figure out exactly what people are seeing there -- it's one of those instances which misses me completely.
To find visual or dialogic evidence from canon of a homosexual interest on the part of the principal characters of B7.
Well, as I've said, or attempted to say, I see a lot of things which I would interpret that way. You probably wouldn't, and hence you would not consider them "evidence", and hence I see no point in trying to enumerate them. The people who made the show probably didn't put them in with that intent. Nonetheless, that's how they appear to me. And I am not claiming anything more than that.
And therefore, because you can't see my point of view, my argument isn't worth listening to?
I have no idea where you got that, since it doesn't resemble anything I've said. I was expressing puzzlement because I didn't understand you, and I was getting an impression there might be some basic assumption involved that was being taken for granted, but which we didn't actually share. I still suspect that's the case.
But that isn't actually what you said. You said, and I quote, "there is no One True Way."
No. What I wrote was an entire *sentence*, from which you have extracted one clause. To wit, and this is pasted directly from my original message (feel free to look it up if you don't believe me):
I don't expect other people to regard things the same way I do, but I do expect them to realize that these are *fictional* characters and open to *multiple* interpretations, no single one of which is the One True Way.
In its original context, where I placed it, the referent and meaning of that clause were perfectly clear. You removed it from that context, dragged it over to another, completely unrelated one, tossed it in, and then proceeded to find it objectionable. You didn't just distort my meaning, you completely obliterated it, wrote a new one, and then complained about it. I think I'm not *too* unjustified in regarding that sort of treatment as unconducive to productive communication.
I've been trying to stay civil, but frankly I don't much like being patronised.
I wasn't being patronising; I was trying to point out, in a reasonably civil and non-hostile manner, that if you are going to resort to the tactics above, there is little point in my saying anything more.
- Lisa
-- Lisa Williams: lcw@dallas.net or lwilliams@raytheon.com Lisa's Video Frame Capture Library: http://framecaplib.com/ From Eroica With Love: http://eroicafans.org/
Fiona said:
But you had asked me how *I* regard canon. In the example you cited, I would regard as canon the fact that Blake said he was 34. Whether he
really
was, or why he would say so if he wasn't, is not canon (provided we aren't given any other canonical information on the subject.)
Actually Blake's clone said that, and might have been provided with disinformation for some dubious Federated purpose.
-(Y)
From: Fiona Moore nydersdyner@yahoo.co.uk
Well, if you came up with some reason for him to have *said* that he's 34, it would fit the canon because it would not contradict what happened on the show
No, to use Neil's terminology, it would be subcanonical. Canon is what happens on the show; subcanon is an intepretation not stated in the show
but
which would not contradict it, noncanon is something which goes against
the
canon. The argument here is not about "fitting" or "not fitting," or what sort of clever explanation one can come up with, but about what *is* on
the
screen.
If we're going to be picky about what is and is not canonical, then we ought to bear in mind that Blake said nothing about his age. It was a *clone* that said he was 34 (and born five hours previously).
Neil
Neil Faulkner wrote:
If we're going to be picky about what is and is not canonical, then we ought to bear in mind that Blake said nothing about his age. It was a *clone* that said he was 34 (and born five hours previously).
That was the only instance I could remember of a specific age being mentioned which might apply to Blake, but Fiona said her reference was in "Breakdown", which is one I haven't seen for a long time, so I figured it was something I'd forgotten.
- Lisa
-- Lisa Williams: lcw@dallas.net or lwilliams@raytheon.com Lisa's Video Frame Capture Library: http://framecaplib.com/ From Eroica With Love: http://eroicafans.org/
Lisa Williams lcw@dallas.net wrote:
Neil Faulkner wrote:
If we're going to be picky about what is and is not canonical, then we ought to bear in mind that Blake said nothing about his age. It was a *clone* that said he was 34 (and born five hours previously).
That was the only instance I could remember of a specific age being mentioned which might apply to Blake, but Fiona said her reference was in "Breakdown", which is one I haven't seen for a long time, so I figured it was something I'd forgotten.
- Lisa
I think, 'working backwards' Ensor junior is in his forties, and Dayna would be in her twenties - which would probably mean their fathers are about thirty years older.
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