Talk:2150s Dalek invasion of Earth

Rename
The Daleks invade not just Earth but blockade the solar system. Earth is named in the introduction, but I don't think it would make the article more accurate by adding it into the title. --Tangerineduel / talk 13:02, January 12, 2012 (UTC)

Proposal to rename and divide the two invasions
To avoid confusion with the Dalek Invasion from Lucie Miller, I propose this be renamed "22nd century Dalek invasion (The Dalek Invasion of Earth)" and another page being created, titled "22nd century Dalek invasion (Lucie Miller)". Toy  Story   Fan  17:29, 21 March 2021 (UTC)
 * Rather than adding dab terms, how about 2150s Dalek invasion of Earth and 2180s Dalek invasion of Earth? The structure better mirrors other pages like Dalek invasion of Mars (which should really be 2150s Dalek invasion of Mars, natch), and "2150s Dalek invasion" has a pleasing parallelism with Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150 A.D.. – n8 (☎) 17:55, 21 March 2021 (UTC)


 * Yeah, that works. Toy   Story   Fan  12:04, 23 March 2021 (UTC)

We might as well use this oppurtunity to standarise the format of all the Dalek invasion pages. I plan to create a page for the 2060s Dalek invasion in the near future which will necessitate a rename to 21st century Dalek invasion whatever is decided here. Do we want to use decades in the titles of 23rd century Dalek invasion and 25th century Dalek invasion as well? Borisashton ☎  23:26, 23 March 2021 (UTC)
 * While we're doing this, could we make including "of [Place]" in the titles a general rule? Literally everybody knows the 2150s Dalek invasion as, well, "the Dalek Invasion of Earth".


 * And on a factual level, the Daleks' invasion of, say, Alvega, also took place in the 2060s, so we're probably going to have to do 2060s Dalek invasion of Earth, or maybe "of the Solar System", rather than just "[060s Dalek invasion". So if we're trying to be consistent, it would both be logical, and in accordance with reader expectations, to do the same to the 2150s one and more besides. Scrooge MacDuck ☎  23:42, 23 March 2021 (UTC)


 * I agree standardising Dalek invasion page names would be a good idea. I was wondering if we should better work out the term "First Dalek War" while we're at it. We could rename this page to that instead, though, as raised above, everyone knows this better as the "Dalek invasion". Personally, I think it makes more sense to give First Dalek War its own page to denote a wider conflict; the Earth and Mars invasions could be listed as "Part of: First Dalek War".


 * That then raises the further issue of "First Dalek War" also being used in the Planet novelisation to refer to the period of the Thal-Dalek War at the time of the Thal-Dalek battle. Is it worth creating two different FDW pages? TheCoud&#39;veBeenKing ☎  11:52, 9 April 2021 (UTC)


 * Aye, in my view, the existence of another conflict called the First Dalek War is enough to make the name unsuitable for this page (although a dabbed redirect a First Dalek War (The Dalek Invasion of Earth) should probably be created).


 * An unrelated problem does occur to me, while we're talking T:NPOV, however: both Genesis of the Daleks and Doctor Who and the Crusaders date the invasion to the 21st century instead of the 22nd. The Genesis instance is just something the Fourth Doctor says, so we could plausibly argue he simply misspoke, but no such luck with the Crusaders instance, which is given by the omniscient third-person narrator.

"Susan had gone, left behind in an England all but destroyed in the twenty-first century when the Daleks had attempted the conquest of Earth, an invasion only just foiled by the Doctor."

- Doctor Who and the Crusaders


 * I'm unsure how to deal with this. First Dalek invasion of Earth would be conjectural, and potentially confusing because while it takes place later in the Daleks timeline, the Stolen Earth Dalek invasion does take place earlier from Earth's perspective. Scrooge MacDuck ☎  13:16, 9 April 2021 (UTC)


 * This but may be a discussion for elsewhere but T:NPOV seems a bit problematic to me in cases like this. Not in the sense that TV stories should be "more valid" than the expanded universe. Rather, doesn't it make sense, when relevant, for any story dealing directly with events (or characters, concepts, etc.) to be given more weight for detailing that element than stories which mention the same thing only, and erroneously, in passing? To give another example, Heart of Stone briefly and inaccurately dates The Vampires of Venice to the 15th century, similarly to Crusaders above; is that then just as valid as the concretely established 1580 setting given in Vampires itself? Do we have to edit every related article which states 1580 to point out HoS said it might have been the 1400s instead? A similar dating controversy to the Dalek invasion here has been raised briefly on the Tenth Planet Cyberman invasion page too because some novelisations give a different date, while most other stories, including The Tenth Planet itself, explicitly give 1986.


 * With all that said, I have to admit none of that fully fixes this type of issue. There's novelisations making changes to their own parent story, never mind others, for one thing (having mentioned Tenth Planet, it's guilty of that). Secondly, unlike Vampires, TDIoE doesn't explicitly date itself beyond the 2164 calendar; 2157 seems to have come from The Daleks' Master Plan, with later stories rolling with it. Thirdly, you still have the likes of Masters of Earth, which is about the invasion, still giving contradictory dates of the 2152 bombardment and the 2154-2164 occupation, rather than 2157-2167. Yet it demonstrates all the more, I'd say, that if T:NPOV is to be followed to its logical extreme, it'd make things harder to follow. We'll have to settle on something in the end, and so while the conflicting dates should be mentioned in the article, the most-used dates should probably take credence for coherence's sake - to my knowledge, that's '57-'67. That's my take anyway. Worth mentioning too that even real-world history is fraught with inconsistencies like this that we can't work out; trying the same thing with continuity in a long-running series about time travel is futile.


 * On that note, though, I can offer this from The Dalek Handbook, which is certainly worth including in the BTS section. It briefly speculates the path of Dalek history after the Doctor creates a new timeline in Genesis of the Daleks:

"Perhaps the Doctor was correct - he'd set the Daleks back a thousand years, and Earth was not invaded until 3157, for example. Or, possibly, their history was played out more or less the same."

- The Dalek Handbook


 * We know a new timeline was created in-universe via A Device of Death. It was also meant to crop up again in Return of the Cybermen, revealing the Genesis fallout caused all kinds of chaos to the timestream, used to explain all manner of continuity issues, though the ending scene was cut. Still, these ideas create scope in there to explain why the dates may keep changing. That, and the other passages in the Handbook which state the Daleks were becoming careless with time travel and their own history before the Genesis intervention. As the Tenth Doctor once said, "Dalek history was confusing enough before the Time War." (On a sidenote, the Handbook also attributes the Fourth Doctor's "year 2000" invasion reference in Genesis to "his erratic memory", hence why the sensors don't detect a lie.)


 * As regards the First Dalek War, I believe we should have separate articles bearing the same title - it's not unreasonable that two separate cultures like the Thals and humanity, without contact with each other, would both consider their wars the "First". First Dalek War (The Daleks), or (Thal-Dalek War), should deal with the early era of the Thal-Dalek War (should it be "Thal-Dalek Wars"?) before the Daleks first left Skaro. First Dalek War (The Dalek Invasion of Earth), or (Dalek Wars) should, rather than redirect to this article, be its own article on the about the Daleks' invasion of the solar system, which was comprised of the 2150s Dalek invasion of Earth (the primary theatre), 2150s Dalek invasion of Mars and other Earth colony attacks. Similar to World War II, where the Western Front, Eastern Front and Pacific War are all among the sub-wars in that conflict. TheCoud&#39;veBeenKing ☎  17:57, 9 April 2021 (UTC)