The TVSFSciFiQuestion is whether the shows filed in CategoryTVSF are SF or SciFi. _This is a transcript of a debate which took place on the CategoryTVSF page. It really needs to be edited into a more documentary form, to reinforce the illusion that WikiIsAWebsite. Turning it into an account of a conversation doesn't count. DissertationOverDiscourse._ Someone commented that the category should be called CategoryTVSciFi rather than CategoryTVSF, because most so-called SF on TV is really SciFi. However Niall (who else?) then refuted this, with the examples of Angel and Buffy, who are both on the TV and should be covered by Speculative Fiction. It was suggested that: SF (either meaning), implies something particular. SF is ArthurCClarke, StephenBaxter, PhilipKDick, GregEgan, OlafStapledon, ChinaMieville, BrianStableford, PaulMcAuley, WilliamGibson, VernorVinge, _GATTACA_ , _TheOuterLimits_ , JorgeLuisBorges, RudyRucker, NealStephenson, LarryNiven, KurtVonnegut, BrianAldiss, JohnWyndham and the like. It's not a hard/soft split (KurtVonnegut and PhilipKDick are in no way hard), nor an SF/fantasy split (although my knowledge of GoodFantasyWriters is sorely lacking). I can't put my finger on what the split is. I guess it's that SF really makes you think: 'intellectual content' sounds a bit pretentious, but i think that's what it comes down to. CSLewis said that ScienceFictionIsTheOnlyGenuineConsciousnessExpandingDrug, and that's central to understanding of it. The claim here is that Buffy is not SF. Buffy _et al_ use SF tropes to tell human-interest stories; they're a bit like EastEnders (well, HeartbreakHigh) with supernatural monsters, or robots or spaceships. This didn't go down well. It was claimed that: Buffy _and_ Angel _are SF *because* they use the tropes of the genre to tell stories_ in a way that a mainstream program can't. _To take just the most obvious example: The Buffy/Angel romance. When Buffy and Angel have sex, Angel experiences a moment of 'perfect happiness', loses his soul and goes evil. As a metaphor, this works - and is played - on several levels. It's about how older guys are evil for young girls. It's about being stalked by your ex. It's about alcoholism and addiction_ . Buffy _and_ Angel _are also sophisticated morality plays. They speak to the nature of good and evil - see 'Lie To Me', or 'Reprise' and 'Epiphany'. They take ethical issues and, again, use the tropes of the genre to make them larger-than-life - in essence, to get away with asking questions they couldn't otherwise get away with. Perhaps, by the standards of written SF, those questions (and the answers given) are neither new nor groundbreaking; but for the medium in which they are presented, they are a definite step forward. And that deserves acknowledgement. The point is these shows are not SF in any way, they are simply fantasy. Few of the stories told in Buffy could not have been told before the development of modern science, and many of them are simply retellings of myths which are as old as recorded human narratives. -- MF _Older, in fact! -- TA_ - SF here doesn't mean ScienceFiction, but SpeculativeFiction, in the OUSFG sense, which includes fantasy (in the Fantasy sense). To me, if the tropes of the genre are just there for colour or effect, then it's sci-fi. That's Farscape, pretty much. If, on the other hand, those tropes are being actively used, then by any reasonable definition I think it's SF. What, after all, is TheLeftHandOfDarkness? Or TheSparrow? -- NH_ But you're right, SciFi does technically exclude _Buffy_ and _Angel_ , whereas we need a category that includes them. SpecFi is the obvious one, by analogy to the ScienceFiction/SpeculativeFiction relationship. It's a horrible, clumsy term, though. -- TA _SFi? -- TA_ One alternative is to define SF by audience. Buffy/Angel fans are weirdly obsessive geeks, and is therefore clearly SF. The fact that they also self-identify as SF fans reinforces this. Buffy is SF. Buffy/Angel fans are wierdly obsessive geeks, because that's the definition of a fan. Buffy/Angel viewers are not. Therefore Buffy is not SF. The mistake of believing audience and fanbase are the same thing has led to the demise of many a TV SF show, cf. DoctorWho. -- MF It also might give you some rather strange ideas about the SF readership; fans (ie con-goers) are a rather small subset. -- TA