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It wasn't an error. I'm talking overall TF continuity, not individual continuities. Canon isn't determined by each country, but by Hasbro and Takara.Sarri wrote:Just one error in that, it's continuities. There is more than one.
Btw, if I'm from a country where certain stories never got published or liscenced, does this mean there aren't canon for me? What about hashed up stories, i.e. The Movie being the pilot of the series, "More than meets the Eye" never happening and the episdoes from all G1 cartoon season all jumbled around to creat one series?
Tramp wrote:Canon is the authoratative list of works authorized under license from Hasbro or Takara. Anything published or produced under license past and present, and thus part of official TF continuity, is canon, along with any retcons made by Hasbro, Takara, and their licensees.
Tramp wrote:Canon is the authoratative list of works authorized under license from Hasbro or Takara. Anything published or produced under license past and present, and thus part of official TF continuity, is canon, along with any retcons made by Hasbro, Takara, and their licensees.
Predaprince wrote:I am very thankful to have posters like sto_vo_kor_2000 who is so energetic about improving others' understanding and enjoyment of the TF universe
Stormrider wrote:You often add interesting insights to conversations that makes the fledglings think and challenges even the sharpest minds
T-Macksimus wrote:I consider you and editor to be amongst the most "scholarly" in terms of your knowledge, demeanor and general approach
Unless otherwise stated officially, as is the case with Star Trek, yes it does. Star Trek is an exception because they specifcally exclude anything other than the live-action TV shows and movies from canon. That is very rare. Lucas licensing's policy is completely different. With them, everything is canon except for materials marked Infinities, which are intentionally out of continuity. As a general rule, if it is officially licensed, it is part of the official canon unless otherwise stated by the owner of the license. This falls under the definition of "the works of an author which have been accepted as authentic", and an "officially recognized set" of stories. Here is the definition from the Mirriam Webster's online dictionary in regards to literary canon (definitions b and c)—sto_vo_kor_2000 wrote:Tramp wrote:Canon is the authoratative list of works authorized under license from Hasbro or Takara. Anything published or produced under license past and present, and thus part of official TF continuity, is canon, along with any retcons made by Hasbro, Takara, and their licensees.
Speeking in General, Just because a body of work is authorized under license by its owner dos not dictate wether or not it is canon.
found here: http://www.merriam-webster.com/cgi-bin/dictionary By those last two definitions, any and all material officially licensed and approved by Hasbro, and/or Takara is canon unless specifically stated otherwise by them.3 [Middle English, from Late Latin, from Latin, standard] a : an authoritative list of books accepted as Holy Scripture b : the authentic works of a writer c : a sanctioned or accepted group or body of related works
Tramp wrote:Unless otherwise stated officially, as is the case with Star Trek, yes it does. Star Trek is an exception because they specifcally exclude anything other than the live-action TV shows and movies from canon. That is very rare. Lucas licensing's policy is completely different. With them, everything is canon except for materials marked Infinities, which are intentionally out of continuity. As a general rule, if it is officially licensed, it is part of the official canon unless otherwise stated by the owner of the license. This falls under the definition of "the works of an author which have been accepted as authentic", and an "officially recognized set" of stories. Here is the definition from the Mirriam Webster's online dictionary in regards to literary canon (definitions b and c)—sto_vo_kor_2000 wrote:Tramp wrote:Canon is the authoratative list of works authorized under license from Hasbro or Takara. Anything published or produced under license past and present, and thus part of official TF continuity, is canon, along with any retcons made by Hasbro, Takara, and their licensees.
Speeking in General, Just because a body of work is authorized under license by its owner dos not dictate wether or not it is canon.found here: http://www.merriam-webster.com/cgi-bin/dictionary By those last two definitions, any and all material officially licensed and approved by Hasbro, and/or Takara is canon unless specifically stated otherwise by them.3 [Middle English, from Late Latin, from Latin, standard] a : an authoritative list of books accepted as Holy Scripture b : the authentic works of a writer c : a sanctioned or accepted group or body of related works
Predaprince wrote:I am very thankful to have posters like sto_vo_kor_2000 who is so energetic about improving others' understanding and enjoyment of the TF universe
Stormrider wrote:You often add interesting insights to conversations that makes the fledglings think and challenges even the sharpest minds
T-Macksimus wrote:I consider you and editor to be amongst the most "scholarly" in terms of your knowledge, demeanor and general approach
Tramp wrote:It's not different canons, just different continuities withion canon. As for people saying that the toy bio for Movie jazz's G1 recolor not being canon, I have never heard that.
Star Trek is the only one I know of that does that. Transformers doesn't have a "normal medium". It is a multimedia line equally spread between toys, cartoon,s comic books, and now movie. As a General rule, The definition provided by the dictionary is pretty clear that a sanctioned accepted work is canon. Every stroy licensed is sanctioned and accepted by Hasbro and/or Takara. byt that definitiion, it's canon.sto_vo_kor_2000 wrote:
Star Trek is not the only one that does not consider bodys of work from other mediims as a non canon source.I would say that the "general rule" is that unless stated by the owner most other types of works outside a propaties normal medium are not considered canon.I would say that ar wars is the exception.
If someone is arguing that an authentic book by a writer is not canon, then something is wrong, because that goes against one of the very definitions of literary canon. The toy bios are just as canon as any other material. They are produced specifically by Hasbro themselves. Why wouldn't they be canon?Leonardo wrote:Tramp wrote:
It's not different canons, just different continuities withion canon. As for people saying that the toy bio for Movie jazz's G1 recolor not being canon, I have never heard that.
There's an example of someone saying the bio isn't canon here:
http://www.seibertron.com/forums/viewto ... b1cb9772f3
and here's an example of someone saying they wonder if the bio will become canon, implying they don't think it's canon now:
http://www.seibertron.com/news/view.php ... d=&f_year=
The issue with canon is one doesn't have to take separate texts as part of the same canon if one doesn't want to. For example, one doesn't have to accept that Wide Sargasso Sea is the official prequel to Jane Eyre, then again one could argue that it is part of the "Jane Eyre canon".
Leonardo wrote:Because, in the example that I gave, the two books are by two different writers from two different periods of time.
The Toy bios are clearly meant to be part of movie canon. The events in the bio of movie Jazz (G1 paint shceme) is meant to take place after the movie, and gives a continuity reason for the paint job. Now, whether this plays out in the sequel is another matter all together, but regardless, "canon" refers to the entire body of TF lore, while "continuity" and "continuiities" refer to just the continuities/realities themselves.As for the toy bios, I think they are canon. What I'm saying is they aren't part of the movie canon because the events related weren't part of the movie. They are, however, clearly part of the movie toy line canon, which is a separate continuity.
Tramp wrote:Star Trek is the only one I know of that does that. Transformers doesn't have a "normal medium". It is a multimedia line equally spread between toys, cartoon,s comic books, and now movie. As a General rule, The definition provided by the dictionary is pretty clear that a sanctioned accepted work is canon. Every stroy licensed is sanctioned and accepted by Hasbro and/or Takara. byt that definitiion, it's canon.sto_vo_kor_2000 wrote:
Star Trek is not the only one that does not consider bodys of work from other mediims as a non canon source.I would say that the "general rule" is that unless stated by the owner most other types of works outside a propaties normal medium are not considered canon.I would say that ar wars is the exception.
Predaprince wrote:I am very thankful to have posters like sto_vo_kor_2000 who is so energetic about improving others' understanding and enjoyment of the TF universe
Stormrider wrote:You often add interesting insights to conversations that makes the fledglings think and challenges even the sharpest minds
T-Macksimus wrote:I consider you and editor to be amongst the most "scholarly" in terms of your knowledge, demeanor and general approach
Tramp wrote:Leonardo wrote:Because, in the example that I gave, the two books are by two different writers from two different periods of time.
Two different writers, but the same character. IF the books are both authorized by the publisher, who I gather owns the character and property, then why would the second book not be canon?The Toy bios are clearly meant to be part of movie canon. The events in the bio of movie Jazz (G1 paint shceme) is meant to take place after the movie, and gives a continuity reason for the paint job. Now, whether this plays out in the sequel is another matter all together, but regardless, "canon" refers to the entire body of TF lore, while "continuity" and "continuiities" refer to just the continuities/realities themselves.As for the toy bios, I think they are canon. What I'm saying is they aren't part of the movie canon because the events related weren't part of the movie. They are, however, clearly part of the movie toy line canon, which is a separate continuity.
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