vaznetti: (axle-tree)
First, last night's BSG (1x07, but I didn't catch the title). spoilers below )

That was a lot more than I thought I'd have to say.

In other news, the debate over authorial intent and the limits of canon can bite me. I've been thinking that it's time for a re-read of Cicero's De Officiis, because I keep worrying at the question of whether an action can be useful but not good. This is because I've been reading far, far too much X-Men fanfiction (comic and movie). I can already see where this whole train of thought is going, and I'm not happy about that. I do not want a new fandom with decades of contradictory canon, thank you very much.

I will probably update again today, as I'm leaving for Oxford this evening, and livejournal is an acceptable procrastination technique.
vaznetti: (Default)
I am so tired it isn't even funny. I was still working last night after midnight, because a lot of stuff has hit all at once; I didn't even make it out of the office until 8. So that brownie was a real lifesaver, but now I feel thickheaded and grumpy.

I've been watching BSG and loving it, although I have a few general thoughts about the worldbuilding. One thing I've noticed in commentaries is that this is a show about people trying to hold their society together. I think that's true, but I'm starting to wonder about all the people who are doing the real day-to-day society building in this universe: the ordinary civilians. The people who got onto a shuttle one morning with a suitcase, only to find themselves a few days later at the far end of the galaxy with the whole world they knew in rubble. What are their living conditions like? How much space do they have? How much food, and where is it coming from? What kind of social organization are they developing? How many of them have sunk into depression? How many of them are looking for a way to volunteer teeny, tiny spoiler ) What are they doing with their time? How have they divided up the work of keeping their ships working? Is the passenger/crew divide starting to break down, or becoming stronger?

I was wondering about their living conditions in particular, because is this even a spoiler? ) And how long were the journeys those ships were on, when the Cylons struck? This is the thing I'm most interested in. It seems that the civilian ships must be more like ocean liners than airplanes, since no one has run out of food yet (or rioted over cramped conditions). I suppose that only long-haul ships would have faster-than-light in the first place, so they might be better provisioned and roomier.

It's possible that these questions were answered in the miniseries, and I've forgotten it; I expect the show to deal with them soon, because that's the kind of show it seems to be. The issue of food supplies and water supplies have already been raised, after all. At the moment, we see the world more through the eyes of the military than anyone else, and they have certain prejudices against civilian life; I'd like to see the show explore the realities of civilian life, rather than those prejudices.
vaznetti: (Default)
For reasons that are no doubt clear to the PTB over at the Space channel, we only had one episode of Battlestar Galactica over the weekend, so I've only seen "33."

a few general thoughts )

All in all, I like this show. Perhaps because I'm going through a phase of Aeneid-love, for no reason that I can discern, except that it's the Aeneid, which is cause enough.

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vaznetti

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