Quote:
Originally Posted by Bêthberry
Well, part of the story is the idea that the Dark Side misuses technology in its worship/pursuit of power, so I think it is part of the essence. For Tolkien, I think, modern machinery is a blight but for SW, it has a glorious side. But perhaps I should ask what you understand by the essence of the story?
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Perhaps if I quote both of us?:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Nerwen
I mean, you could transplant much of the plot into a pure fantasy setting with minimal changes.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bêthberry
We also can't overlook the aspects of the cowboy genre in Star Wars. It seems to encompass so many different kinds of stories while weaving its own adventure.
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And these stories could be taken from, or brought into, almost any genre– there's very little there that's exclusive to science-fiction.
Yes, misuse of technology
is a theme– and as you say, perhaps it
is part of the essence– but for some people that doesn't let
Star Wars off the charge of being a disguised fantasy. (And after all, it's a secondary theme of
The Lord of the Rings too.)
Another example: A "pure" science-fiction story might deal with the
development of faster-than-light travel, and how it changes society, etc., whereas in
Star Wars it's really just the way people get around– spectacular space battles notwithstanding.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Bêthberry
Sounds to me like SF must have its purists as well as Tolkien.
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I'll say.
I couldn't care less myself... but purists there are, and they consider
Star Wars to be not quite kosher, so to speak. The sort of people I'm talking about are fond of rating fiction according to minute gradations of "hardness"– the harder the better. The crew at StarDestroyer.Net must know this perfectly well, which may be why they're jumpy.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Bêthberry
Nice to discuss SF with someone who appreciates it!
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Same to you!