Interpretation of a character is obviously in the eyes of the beholder. I fell in love with Daniel just by reading the transcripts at Gatenoise, sometime shortly after the eighth season finale aired. I started watching eps when I couldn't resist any longer, and then I fell in love with the rest of the team. Then I started reading fanfic, and I met lots and lots and lots of other Daniels and Sams and Jacks and Teal'cs – some easily recognizable, a few remarkably like the ones that I saw on the screen and that lived in my head, and many that I didn't know at all.
I'm not going to insist, or even suggest, that every fanfic author out there write their characters to fit my specifications (even if the thought of several thousand new gen teamy goodness stories is immensely attractive). I don't think even the Goa'uld are quite that arrogant! On the other hand, fanfic writers would be doing themselves a great service by making sure that the characters they write about are actually the characters that their readers want to read about – if nothing else, they'll have a lot more readers that way.
There's nothing wrong with fanon, as a concept. For the most part, most common fanon assumptions about Daniel are based on canon, or extrapolated from canon, or at least don't contradict canon. Others… aren't. And if the writer airily asserts, "Well, this is an AU/my personal universe/not really important to the story, so just go with the flow, okay?" – then I will wish the writer well, and go find an author who is actually writing about the Daniel Jackson I know and love.
Some fanon amuses me; some confuses me; and some really, really gets on my nerves. I'll tackle one per post, or possibly a few related ones at once, starting with a real fan-favorite.
Daniel and Coffee
Yeah. I'd call that an addiction, or something close to it.
As an aside, I will cheerfully confess that I skimmed bits and pieces of the entire first season to make sure I got all that right, which was not exactly a hardship. I almost forgot the whole essay thing to simply watch and enjoy. Happy sigh. Love, love, love the early seasons.
So our first bit of fanon is actually canon: Yes, Daniel Jackson really does constantly drink coffee. The common fanfic bit about Jack/Sam/Teal'c/Janet/some secret admirer bringing him coffee doesn't have any canon basis, but it's hardly an unreasonable extrapolation (although bringing Daniel food and drink is another bit of fanon I will discuss in a future post). On the other hand, there's not much canon proof for the other fanon assertion on the subject of caffeine: that Daniel is a coffee snob.
The first real canon suggestion that Daniel is picky about coffee doesn't show up until Season Nine, when Mitchell, the ultimate fanboy, interviews one of the Daniels in Ripple Effect and gives him "Sumatra Mandheling, one cream, two sugars," as his regular preference. The problem with accepting this as proof is two-fold. First, one might theorize that the writers have picked up on the "Daniel as coffee snob" thing from the fans and incorporated it, since it shows up so late in the show's history; and second, while I'm not a real coffee drinker myself, I always thought coffee snobs drank their coffee black and considered milk and sugar to be sacrilege. I also understand that flavored coffees are considered to be anathema by coffee snobs; but an Urgo-influenced Daniel is very appreciative of cinnamon, or possibly chicory, flavored coffee. If I'm wrong about either of those assumptions, please let me know.
(Daniel moodily pours a steady stream of sugar into his coffee when he's in the Waffle House at the End of the Universe in Threads, but I wouldn't use that as proof either way, as it's pretty obvious that he has no actual intention of drinking it.)
We can add to the "not a coffee snob" side of the argument when we note that in the movie, Daniel was using water from a regular water fountain to fill his coffee pot, which means that he didn't much care if the water tasted metallic. Also, if we consider what we know about Daniel as a whole, he probably didn't have the chance to become a coffee snob until the actual Stargate years. The fellow we met in the movie, who lugs around his entire life in two battered suitcases, is hardly likely to be able to splurge on specialty coffee, is he? Nor is it likely that the coffee he drank on digs was brewed in anything other than a small metal pot, rather than a proper coffee-maker. I very much doubt he was drinking specialty coffee when he was working on his degrees, either, and for the same reasons: too expensive, and too impractical, to manage on a student's budget.
Conclusion: Daniel-the-caffeine-addict is canon, but Daniel-the-coffee-snob is fanon with little basis in canon.
My personal fanon opinion? Daniel loves coffee and drinks it whenever he can; he certainly enjoys specialty coffees, but he's perfectly capable of getting along with Air Force-issue sludge if that's the only thing available.
"Anyway, I'm sorry, but that just happens to be how I feel about it. What do you think?"
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Ah, that's not the kind of AU I was talking about. It's more the bend in the road kind. Like, suppose Kawalsky wasn't killed, or Jolinar wasn't found out when she was, or the Stargate program became public, etc.
Yeah, when the AUs are essentially the character names in completely different scenarios, I don't find that's really Stargate fic anymore. Some of it's good, but it's way too AU for me...unless someone writes Teal'c P.I. That would be awesome...probably cracky, but awesome! But if so, you're right, you've got to work extra hard that the character development is top notch.
Or, to turn the topic on its head, it doesn't matter if the author includes everthing on the checklist:
That's the trick of really good fanfic. It's not a matter of having them "talk" the Stargate talk. It's not that Jack makes a random Wizard of Oz comment, it's how, when, and why he makes the comment. Otherwise you've got caricatures of the Stargate team, and not the characters.
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Ah, okay. Except why should I accept characterization as different in those "fork in the road" stories, unless there's a good reason for it? I don't have trouble with stories that include author's notes like, "In my universe, Meridian never happened and Janet Fraiser wasn't allowed offworld in Heroes." I have trouble with authors who assert that since their Stargate universe is different, they needn't bother making the characters recognizable in anything other than sharing names.
Frex, there's an quantum mirror fic out there where they stumble on a Daniel who never got SG-1 back after the S3 finale, because Solitudes didn't happen in his universe. Now, I would have expected that Daniel to be closed down and depressed - not only is he missing his closest friends, and he doesn't know if they've survived, but he's not with them because his stupid appendix blew and he has no hope of ever going offworld ever again, since there isn't a Stargate to go through. And if the author had chosen to take that route, that would have been a fascinating AU Daniel, with different characterization that I would have wholeheartedly embraced... because it would have fit the character.
(The author didn't take that route, sad to say. Maybe someone will write that fic sometime, because I think I'd truly enjoy it. As long as there was a happy ending, natch.)
I didn't rec a month's worth of AUs because I don't like 'em. :) I love episode fixes, or even episode "unfixes" where the story twists for the worse because a single thing didn't happen. (What if Sam hadn't visited Cassie, to use your example?) But as you say, it's not a matter of having them talk the talk; it's a matter of making them the real people we love (they are real, right?!) instead of mere caricatures.