Recently, Adam Kotsko blogged about Star Trek and canon (a subject of ongoing interest of mine, as you are undoubtedly well aware). Here is an excerpt from there:
Iย amย a Star Trek fan, and Iโm here today to talk to you about canon. But I will warn all the hardcore fans who are relieved to be on safe territory: my fandom has taken a strange form. When I was a kid, I was a loyalย Next Generationย viewer, and I even read a couple of the novels. But I only seriously dug into Star Trek as an adult, when The Girlfriend suggested we try aย Next Generationย rewatchโwhich inevitably turned into an epic journey through all the Trek series and movies. By that time, of course, I had been thoroughly trained in cultural analysis and critical theory, and I tended to read Star Trek โas literature.โ
So when I talk about canon, I am talking about the strange claim that all of these different stories, written across the last fifty years by dozens of different people, are somehow all โthe sameโ story, that they all fit together as a portrait of a consistent โuniverseโ with its own history. I have already compared the Star Trek canon to scriptural canons in a scholarly article (paywalled journal issue link), and here I would like to pick up on a point that I briefly address there: namely, the tendency for sprawling scriptural canons to develop a โcanon within the canonโ that guides the interpretation of the rest. In Judaism, for example, the โcanon within the canonโ is the Torah, while Christians privilege the New Testament as the standard by which their hybrid canon is to be unified. And in Star Trek, of course, the โcanon within the canonโ for the vast majority of fans isย Next Generationโฆ
For those interested in Star Trek and/or canon, but especially both, the whole post is worth your time.
Kotsko followed up with a post on rewatching an episode of Discovery, in which he opines:
The basic mechanism of committed Trek fandom is the dialectical interplay between the two impulses of escapist pleasure and dyspeptic nitpickeryโas well as their cross-pollination in nitpicking other peopleโs pleasures, ruining them, and in reveling, joyfully, in the perfect picked nit (especially when you can also provide a clever, No-Prize solution to an apparently insolvable problem of canon).
This can be true of Star Trek fandom, and of religious adherence as well โ but surely it doesnโt have to be.
One thing seems sure โ this is a blog series that no one interested in Star Trek and/or canon is going to want to miss!