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oldschoolsciencefiction

prettierjesus-deactivated202109 asked:

Do you know when "canon," like as a concept, became like a standard nerd thing?

vintagegeekculture answered:

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The amazing thing about the term “canon” is that it didn’t bubble up from the undifferentiated mass of fandom (who actually knows who came up with memes?). We know exactly and specifically where the word comes from when used in this context: an essay written by a Sherlock Holmes fan in 1911, who compared the wild and crazy veneration that fanatical Holmes fans have for the original stories, to holy writ. Another name for the books assembled in the Bible was the canon, as opposed to other books that, for various reasons, were left out of the Bible and “didn’t count.” In other words, the term was originally used ironically and in a self-deprecating way to talk about the almost religious intensity of Holmes fans. 

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Part of the reason the term canon caught on was because, even in the 1910s, the public was so mad for Sherlock Holmes that there were all kinds of illegal imitators and non-Conan Doyle authors and knockoffs, and yes, there were even amateur works that were distributed by mail (what today we’d call “fanfiction,” some of which even survives today), so a crucial distinction began to arise between the stuff that was “official” and the stuff that wasn’t. So, here we have the three things that we need to even have the concept of canon as we define it: 1) a group dedicated enough to actually care, who can communicate, 2) a necessary distinction between “official” and not, particularly due to the presence of amateur works (what today we’d call fanfiction), 3) a long term property that could sustain that devotion. 

Now, of the three, which do you think was the one that was absent from a lot of science fiction fandom’s first few decades? It’s actually 3. Canon only matters if it’s something other than just a single story, which the business model of the pulps discouraged. Like TV in the 1960s, every story had to be compartmentalized and serial storytelling was mostly discouraged.

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One fandom, big from the 1930s to the 1960s was E.E. Smith’s space opera Lensman series. The Lensman stories were so popular that it received 5 sequels, all of which were planned from the outset. Some Lensman fanfiction from the 1940s is actually still available for reading. Part of the reason the Lensman stories were so popular is that it described a consistent world with consistent attributes: Inertialess Drives, aliens like Chickladorians, Vegians, Rigellians, pressor beams, space axes, Valerian Space Marines, superdreadnoughts, “the Hell Hole in Space,” the works. It was way easier to get sucked into this than it was with the usual “one and done.”  Take for example, this amateur guide to the Lensman series, with art by Betty Jo Trimble.

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Canon “policy” as we know it today, as a part of a corporate strategy, started with Star Trek: the Next Generation. Before that, there was no “multimedia property” big enough to necessitate it; Star Wars just didn’t care, which is why pre-Zahn “expanded universe” stories like the Marvel comics were so bonkers. There was no reason to believe that the Trek novels, including good ones by John M. Ford and Diane Duane, were anything else than totally official. Roddenberry, though, was deeply angry about losing control of the film series, and due to his illness (hidden from the public at the time), his canon policy was enforced by his overly zealous attorney. In Star Trek canon, for a long time, the only thing that counted was what was on screen. And not even that…the Star Trek animated series, for several decades, was decanonized. (It wasn’t until Deep Space 9 that animated references crept back in, and today, it’s as canon as everything else).

I don’t want to scare anyone, and this is hearsay, but I’ve heard from three people who were there that Next Generation writers, at least as long as Roddenberry and his attorney were around, were encouraged to not think of the original series as canon at all. References to Spock and even an episode that had an appearance by the Gorn were rewritten.

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The Star Trek canon policy was so harsh and unexpected that rules were invented deliberately to kick out popular reference sources, like the rule that starships could only have even numbered nacelles, which meant much of the Franz Joseph guides, published in the millions and praised by Roddenberry and others as official, were vindictively decanonized. 

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Star Wars canon is interesting because it was entirely created by the West End Roleplaying Game. It was the only major Star Wars product printed in the Star Wars Dark Age, the 5-6 years between 1986-1991 when all toy lines and comics were canceled and the fandom was effectively in a coma or dead. The Roleplaying Game was the first place that information was collected from diverse sources like the comics and novels. Every single Star Wars novelist read the West End game because it was the only time all this information was in one place. 

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Marvel Comics canon is a very interesting example because it was a harbinger of things to come: superhero comics were one of the earliest places in geek culture where the “inmates started to run the asylum”…that is to say, fans produced the comics, guys like Roy Thomas (creator of the Vision and Ultron) who started off as a fanzine writer. Because of the back and forth in letters pages, there was an emphasis on everyone keeping it all together that didn’t exist at DC, which at last count, had 5 (!) totally contradictory versions of Atlantis. 

oldschoolsciencefiction

From Vintage Geek Culture via Mystery Theater: Exploring the concept of “canon”.

lawrencearabia
thoodleoo

no punctuation we read like romans

caecilius-est-pater

NOPUNCTUATIONORLOWERCASEORSPACESWEREADLIKEROMANS

terpsikeraunos

INTER·PVNCTVATION·WE·INSCRIBE·LIKE·ROMANS

imaginarycircus

words doesn’t classical matter order in greek;

tanoraqui

we, in a manner akin to that of a man who once was, in Rome, an orator of significant skill, who was then for his elegance of speech renowned and now for his elaborate structure of sentences cursed by generations of scholars of Latin, the language which he spoke and we now study, Cicero, write, rather than by any efficiency, functionality, or ease of legibility have our words, our honors, the breaths of our hearts, be besmirched.

ceuulusuoluptatemcapit

The fact that this has yet to devolve into boustrophedon is a miracle… or a challenge. I’m looking at you @terpsikeraunos @macdicilla @labellamordens

macdicilla

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I’m up to it

lawrencearabia

Not many jnſtances of Punctuation - but for many Daſhes – et words Capitaliz’d for emphavſis, but not logicaly - ſpeeling and word Endings varied Gratelie - and the long S - ſ - vſed in at the ſtart and Centre of wordes - & the short “s” vſed only at the end - as with the U and V, and the I and J - but v and j only at the ſtart of wordes (we diſtinguishe not between Vouels and Conſonants, only decoratiue Letteres). Ye letter “y” being in lookes cloſe to an Olde letter “þ” which is vſed as “th” - Y may be vſed in the place of TH - but only ſparingly - and ſtill Pronounc’d the ſame as TH. Long and rambling ſentences - ſeeminglie without end - a paragraph can conſiſt of One whole ſentence, and ſhort ſentences are rare – we ſcribe like hiſtorical Modern English – and other european Languages.

dishesoap
caffeinewitchcraft

I’m binging humans are weird posts right now and I am probably going to get way too into this later tonight, but just the entire “hold my beer” culture interacting with Very Serious Alien Diplomats makes me want to scream.

Alien: By my calculations, the leap from the landing bay to the ship is too great for your physiology, Human Steve. I will call for assistance–

Human Steve: nah, nah, nah, C’Rahn, nah I know parkour.

Alien C’Rahn: Who is Parkou—aaaaAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!

Human Steve:

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Originally posted by blazepress

Alien C’Rahn: AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH I KILLED THE–

Human Steve, rolling: LOL sick!

Alien C’Rahn, rushing to the edge and seeing Human Steve alive: HOW?!

Human Steve: *shrugs* Parkour.

loudfederationscreeching
theparanoidandroidia

See that lil green screen in the distance? That’s Star Trek Discovery filming! I walked past it at lunch and the sign out front said ‘Green Harvest Crew Entrance’ and I was like THATS A FILMING CODENAME I JUST KNOW IT. So then I looked it up and voila! Star Trek! That’s the Aga Khan museum that they’re at, it’s super futuristic looking so it’s very appropriate.

speedygal

Linking pictures for reference of the muesuem.

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This is going to probably be part of a good Discovery episode! :D

static-warp-bubble

I am so annoyed that I moved to England and no longer live in Toronto, otherwise I’d be awkwardly hanging around filming locations

aura218

that IS a star trekky building. they’ll prolly CG in a huge techy tower

dishesoap

Space is great

a-really-exceptional-alien-51

Wouldnt you agree @not-a-space-alien

not-a-space-alien

Motherfucker i came to earth to get away from space. Space is terrifying.

a-really-exceptional-alien-51

Maybe you just weren’t cut out for it honey ;)

not-a-space-alien

dont fucking patronize me 

a-really-exceptional-alien-51

U wanna go? My blasters aint set to stun buddy

not-a-space-alien

I have done nothing to invite such hostilities from any sentient life form and the fact that you initiate contact only to react so brazenly and aggressively really makes me question whether you are a species I want to have any working relations with.  As a general rule I make it a habit to be cordial in any First Contact as a precaution against cultural misunderstands but you are really pushing the limits of my patience and sensitivity on this matter.  As an interstellar fugitive I would like to remind you that I have braved temperatures that fluctuate between millions of degrees above and below zero, objects hurdling at near light speed with enough momentum to instantly obliterate anything it collides with, planets that rain glass shards and have atmospheres thick enough to crush a car, the social isolation of abandoning everything and spending years piloting a craft alone that was meant for a crew of fifty, and I did this to flee things yet even more terrifying that might drive a sane being to brave the wide unknown of the black depths of the void of space as a preferable alternative.

And you think I would be afraid of you?

a-really-exceptional-alien-51

I must admit when I have been beaten. I humbly accept my loss and apologise for my hostile greeting. At first I felt trepidation at finding another star goer here on this planet, but you have proven to be worthy of my respect, and so I offer a truce, oh brave one, and the timid hope of a chance to share this little world.

not-a-space-alien

lol its’ fine

dishesoap
languages-georg

So I used to have a Russian friend who had a pretty thick accent and like a lot of Russians tended to eschew articles. She would say things like “Get in car.” And stuff.

Well one day this asshole who had been kind of tagging along with us asks her why she talks like that because it makes her sound dumb and I still remember her response word for word.

“Me? Dumb? Maybe in America you have to say get in THE car because you are so stupid that people might just get in random car, but in Russia we don’t need to say that. We just fucking know because we are not stupid.”

lANGUAGE
scriptmedic

Anonymous asked:

What can you tell me about different types of fear responses like on a physical level? Is that related to "going into shock"? Also this kinda blurs the lines of your jurisdiction, so if you can't really answer I totally get it. Thanks so much for everything you do!!!!!!!!!

scriptmedic answered:

Hey there nonny! Actually, physiology of the adrenaline response is exactly my jurisdiction :) You asked for a “physical level”, so I’m going to talk physiology, not psychology. 

Physiologically, what’s going to happen is that your character’s body is going to release a bunch of neurotransmitters and hormones, primarily epinephrine (AKA adrenaline). Adrenaline has a number of physiological effects: 

  • Increased heart rate and blood pressure
  • Increased respiratory rate
  • Fear and panic (when induced by fear) 
  • Dilated pupils 
  • Sweating and a feeling of being hot all over 
  • Increased blood flow to muscles; decreased blood flow to organs 
    • Nausea, vomiting 
    • “Pucker factor” – increased rectal tone. Yes, really. 
  • Tunnel vision
  • Fine motor control is difficult or lost entirely 
  • Decreased sensation of pain

People get stronger, feel less pain, and can think less clearly under the effects of an adrenaline surge, aka adrenaline rush, aka sympathetic surge, aka catecholamine dump. 

The correlation between the fear response and a character entering shock – actual, medical shock, ie systemic hypoperfusion, or not enough blood flow getting  where it needs to be – is that adrenaline is the body’s first line of defense against the effects of shock. Adrenaline tightens up the blood vessels, which increases blood pressure (can normalize it if it’s low). Adrenaline also helps us get out of lethal situations – or at least, it helped our ancestors do that. 

What’s useful to understand about the relationship between adrenaline and shock is that if shock is the problem, adrenaline is the solution

However, this amazing superpower humans have comes at a cost. Afterward, we get exhausted. We also can’t think as clearly or make rational decisions during these episodes. 

For a surprisingly good guide to adrenaline response from a blog I don’t necessarily recommend in general, check out [this article from the Art of Manliness]. The research about this is mainly based on soldiers in combat, but it gets discussed actually a lot in the medical sphere, because when a patient is shitting the bed in front of you, you need to know how to remain calm. 

Hope this helped! 

xoxo, Aunt Scripty

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silvercistern
sophrosynic

like, i get the desire that people have to want things like scars & stretchmarks & imperfections to be beautified and aestheticized in the same way that features which conform do. i get the need to want to see yourself romanticized in that way, to want to switch the language and the way people visualize imperfections.

but like, sometimes i really don’t understand the point of doing all that. because these things just exist at the end of the day, & i just want them to exist without adding or negating my value as a human being. i don’t even want 80000 aesthetic pictures of my acne scars or armpit hair, i just want them to exist and for people to treat me like a human being, and not like some kind of eldritch horror OR as some kind of epic symbol against beauty standards. i just wanna exist and for these things to just be treated as what they are–a consequence of living a life and nothing else. 

and i think it’s deeply misguided sometimes to act as if the only way to counter negative shit from some of the narrow beauty standards that exist is to run in the total opposite direction, rather than learning to come to terms with the fact that yeah, some things aren’t pretty, but that doesn’t mean they’re ugly, that just means that they are and they exist and don’t have an inherent value, and more importantly, don’t have any sort of bearing on your own worth as a person either.

onlyfrillsandhorses-deactivated
ultrafacts

Source

Video of Tama

Follow Ultrafacts for more facts

majikkant

The picture in the background of the second one

pizzaismylifepizzaisking

Tama is boss

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ultrafacts

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gatochick

THE TRAINS HAVE CARTOON TAMAS ON THEM

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ultrafacts

Sad update everyone, Tama recently passed away… An estimated 3,000 people, including railway officials, attended Tama the cat’s funeral on Sunday, days after she died of heart failure aged 16. [x]

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retro-geek

For those who haven’t read articles about it, the local shrine elevated her to a god. She’s now the Eternal Stationmaster and patron god of the station.

karinanotcinerina

Beautiful.

system-fail-ure

Now I’m crying thanks

sapphic-matriarchy

and a new cat was hired right?

clarenecessities

yep! her name is Nitama (essentially ”second tama” or “tama II”) and she served under Tama as an apprentice before being appointed her deputy

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she works very hard

cat therapy