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<p>Supermensch wrote:
Since
Canon Sues are totally a thing, it's pretty arbitrary whether you go with "Canon Sues are Mary Sues with the distinction of being canon while non-canon Mary Sues are typically simply called Mary Sues" or "Mary Sue exclusively refers to fanon characters while the similar BUT MEANINGFULLY DISTINCT (somehow) corresponding concept for canon characters is called Canon Sue".
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<p>Nice point, although I don't know if TVTropes is on the same sort of "Encyclopedic" level as Wikipedia. But still, yes there is a distinction.
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<p>Supermensch wrote:
And Robin, did you really have to involve race in an analogy about character tropes? "So just as a person can talk and act like, say, a black person" <i>Right</i>, a person's race totally makes them "act and talk" a certain way... That's pretty offensive, you know.
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First, you don't know *my* ethnicity. You *don't know* who I grew up among and watched and which mannerisms *I* exhibit. Nor any of the conflicts I had was drawn into while growing up despite trying to thread lines of avoidance between THREE neighborhood racial camps. I may have the right to use the ones I did. And frankly, and despite my skin tone I am legally black, what *I* find offensive are those who try to sanitize racial *realities*. MUST racial tropes define ethnicities? No, they shouldn't. However when someone of an ethnicity tries NOT to use the street argot of their area, they are ridiculed and told to their faces that they "are not ______". Apparently I was an "Oreo" as I grew up.
</p><p>THAT is what *I* find offensive. But this is not the forum or venue to discuss it. If any wish to discuss this aspect further, feel free to find me on any of my other wikia talk pages <i>where I admin</i>. You can find a list of my wikias on my Central profile.
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SECOND, please note that my INITIAL version of the analogy was as sanitized as I could make it, not identifying anything beyond "one ethnicity" versus another. However it was challenged, so I brought it down to a level I hoped the other poster could grasp.
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