Before 9/11/2001, terrorism wasn't a part of the collective American public conscience. After the Pentagon and World Trade Center attacks, words like Taliban, Al Queda, and suicide bomber became household terms. In the European countries(UK, France, German), Japan, The Middle East countries, several nations in Africa; all faced and lived with the reality of terrorism for decades. With the continuing turmoil in the Middle East and Africa and with groups such as ISIL, Al Queda, The Taliban, Boko Haram,and Hamas still causing trouble.
My question is
Do you think the writers of Trek handled the concept of terrorism well?
Follow up: Do you think the different eras and types of terrorsist groups account for the disparity among terrorism's portrayal in the media?
Watching episodes prior to 9/11
TNG
The High Ground
Preemptive Strike
DS9
The Darkness and the Light
In The Hands of the Prophets
The Maqui I-II
In The Pale Moonlight
Past Prologue
Things Past
For the Cause
For the Uniform
Tacking to the Wind
The first 3 episodes of Season 2
(Many others I can't recall atm)
Post 9/11/2001 you have
ENT
The Expanse
Carpenter Street
Chosen Realm
The Forgotten
Demons
Terra Prime
Films
Star Trek Into Darkness
Pre-9/11 I suspect the inspiration for terrorism stories and themes for Trek writers was the IRA. Framing the terrorists (in Trek) as sympathetic in their David vs Golaith struggle for independence. The watching the Pre-9/11 stories I get a sense that while the writers are not condoning terrorism, they are saying it's permissible in certain situations.
Post-9/11 though, it's all different. Terrorist acts are viewed as vile and condemned. You have groups like Terra Prime which want Earth for Earthings the same way the Bajorans freedom fighters want Bajor for Bajorans and the Maqui want the freedom to live where they made their homes (in the DMZ). And yet the latter two are romantized for there decisions to take a stand against their oppressors and agitators, but Terra Prime is viewed a evil and wrong for the steps they take. Compare the fall of Terra Prime to DS9's "Blaze of Glory" (with the fall of the Maqui) where Sisko and Dax wax poetic about Eddington's end by dying in what he believed in.
The episode "Chosen Realm" is the most blatant (as a metaphor for Islamic Extremest) in it's message on terrorism and religious extremism.
My question is
Do you think the writers of Trek handled the concept of terrorism well?
Follow up: Do you think the different eras and types of terrorsist groups account for the disparity among terrorism's portrayal in the media?
Watching episodes prior to 9/11
TNG
The High Ground
Preemptive Strike
DS9
The Darkness and the Light
In The Hands of the Prophets
The Maqui I-II
In The Pale Moonlight
Past Prologue
Things Past
For the Cause
For the Uniform
Tacking to the Wind
The first 3 episodes of Season 2
(Many others I can't recall atm)
Post 9/11/2001 you have
ENT
The Expanse
Carpenter Street
Chosen Realm
The Forgotten
Demons
Terra Prime
Films
Star Trek Into Darkness
Pre-9/11 I suspect the inspiration for terrorism stories and themes for Trek writers was the IRA. Framing the terrorists (in Trek) as sympathetic in their David vs Golaith struggle for independence. The watching the Pre-9/11 stories I get a sense that while the writers are not condoning terrorism, they are saying it's permissible in certain situations.
Post-9/11 though, it's all different. Terrorist acts are viewed as vile and condemned. You have groups like Terra Prime which want Earth for Earthings the same way the Bajorans freedom fighters want Bajor for Bajorans and the Maqui want the freedom to live where they made their homes (in the DMZ). And yet the latter two are romantized for there decisions to take a stand against their oppressors and agitators, but Terra Prime is viewed a evil and wrong for the steps they take. Compare the fall of Terra Prime to DS9's "Blaze of Glory" (with the fall of the Maqui) where Sisko and Dax wax poetic about Eddington's end by dying in what he believed in.
The episode "Chosen Realm" is the most blatant (as a metaphor for Islamic Extremest) in it's message on terrorism and religious extremism.