nsaxo.blogg.se

Race, Gender and Politics in Star Trek by Sal Creber
Race, Gender and Politics in Star Trek by Sal Creber







Race, Gender and Politics in Star Trek by Sal Creber

Still, “Past Tense” was notable for depicting racism not from the perspective of a well-meaning white liberal, as seen in previous iterations of Star Trek, but through the eyes of people of color directly threatened by violence and indifference.It is worth noting that, while TOS was a trendsetter in its storylines about race and gender politics, the show never had any explicit representation of queer characters, and neither did Star Trek: The Next Generation. The episode could perhaps have dug even deeper into its critique of bigotry. The script was also written and produced only two years after the Los Angeles Riots, which clearly influenced the story. Johnson’s “Great Society,” a series of domestic programs meant to end poverty and inequality in the ’60s. It dispensed with clumsy metaphors to examine public health and mental illness it also confronted the effects of the country’s waning optimism following Lyndon B. Combining a searing look at homelessness with an indictment of America’s refusal to tackle the crisis head-on, it was arguably the most straightforwardly political story Star Trek ever told. “Past Tense” aired 26 years later, in the third season of Deep Space Nine. The allegory was obvious, but it elided the complexity of how racist societies operate. For example, the 1969 Trek episode “Let That Be Your Last Battlefield” tries to make a point about the absurdity of racism-via a ham-fisted story about an alien population that’s divided between individuals whose faces are half-white and half-black, and those who have the color scheme reversed.

Race, Gender and Politics in Star Trek by Sal Creber

Throughout in the series, aliens would stand in for different elements of an all-too-familiar debate about race, class, or gender. In science fiction, it’s common for the problems of the human condition to be addressed through allegory.









Race, Gender and Politics in Star Trek by Sal Creber