There is a recent question I've favorited (starred) and been monitoring which has a lot of positive attention, views, and up-votes. The question has dozens of up-votes along with the answers, and there's a very interesting dynamic brewing there.
Keeping the Community Engaged
It is not a question I'm participating in directly. Feel free to check my recent activity if there's doubt. My vested interest here is only as a spectator and reader. It's rare to me in the areas I look at to see this much interest in something as opposed to an answer perfect for the FGITW who just fires one quickly and moves to the next question. To see a question with that much activity only tends to happen once every 10 pages worth of new questions in this area, while the majority of questions get a cynical, tired, and often routine response. These rare questions show me a community rising from the dead.
Update with Example
I got those looking around and trying to figure out which Q I'm talking about. So let me provide an example I'm comfortable to share of my own: Can we implement a doubly-linked list using a single pointer?. This one got closed just when the activity was starting to skyrocket. Now since I participated in answering this one, I'm not coming at this from the angle of like, "Oh no, this question got shut down after I spent so much time on the answer!" (though in honesty, I do feel that a bit, but I didn't even have the best answer there and possibly even better ones could have come in). More disappointing was just having a C thread like that go away and then leaving us with either routine homework-style Qs or esoteric ones about APIs, microcontrollers, and OSes that often either get one answer or none.
Definitely a Dupe But...
Yet I was dismayed to find, days later, that someone discovered it to be a duplicate of a much older question, and now it has two close votes. I followed the redirection link and I must admit that this new question is, in fact, very much a duplicate of the old one. There is no dispute there.
The only subtle difference is that the old question is asking a slightly broader question (but slightly less general -- here "broad" as in requesting more details), so the answers there are "more complete" but "less specific". The bigger, more blatant difference is that the old question is old, obscure, and dusty, it only had 1 up-vote, and the answers aren't quite as varied and interesting (albeit almost all of them directly address the issue).
Now I don't want to link to this question here because my personal interest is to not see it closed. Let's just put this as a general question.
What should we do in this case when a new question which has far more positive community interest, views, and activity, is a duplicate of an obscure, hardly-viewed question which didn't have anywhere near the momentum and interest and variety as the new one?
Momentum, Potential
I almost want to suggest redirecting the old one to be a duplicate of the newer, superior, much more mature one (where maturity is defined by participation rather than age). I'm just sad to see this new question which has so much more energy going for it than the old being shut down because some obscure question which hardly anyone viewed existed long before. I'm all for site cleanliness but it's kind of sad when a Q&A which has so much momentum gets killed like this in favor of some dull relic of the past. With the higher traffic, momentum starts to become a factor in producing more interesting information (and carrying that potential). Momentum doesn't last, it's a fleeting quality (and more so with high traffic), and a question that is only periodically shut down could lose it forever.
I see site posterity and mitigating duplicates as a strong need on one hand, but also there's keeping the energy and positive activity and interest of the participants going on the other hand because of the potential that carries for better answers than ever before. Even from the pure site posterity angle, this somewhat redundant Q seems to be contributing vastly more useful information to the site than a very narrowly-applicable disposable question requesting to debug one's homework, relatively-speaking.
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that contains your element".) But I'm not convinced the solution entails switching around the duplicate-duplicated relationship in case similar to the one you brought up. Ideally, the answers on the duplicate question should be merged into the old one. This is not something I've worked on myself so I don't know how you go about getting it done.