Deliberate sexism and unconscious sexism is not quite the same thing.
The failing after Number One was that of Gene Roddenberry and successive writers who didn't follow up on the idea. Did they do so consciously or not?
There is a question I have always hoped D.C. Fontana would be asked given she there: was it an actual policy on the show that women could not be cast in command roles or was it simply no one thought of it after "The Cage?" In extent during the series was the idea ever floated of casting a woman as a starship Captain or Commodore or Admiral and the idea dismissed or did it simply not occur to anyone?
On the issue of Uhura. By right of rank at some point she should have been told on at least one occasion to take the conn. Was it a deliberate act of exclusion to write it that way or did it simply not occur to the writers and creative staff that the Black woman is the more correct choice (by virtue of rank and experience) to take the conn rather than the junior white male?
TOS had an issue of (lack of) consistency which really isn't surprising given the changes in society going on when the show was in production. Indeed some of what McKenna says in "Embracing The Wind" speaks to this very point. But the underlying spiritual message of the show was positive and one of inclusiveness. So why not build on that rather than the worst interpretations of the show's inconsistencies in conveying said message?
And thats where STC falls down because they tried to rationalize the inconsistency rather than simply build on the underlying positive message.
Just because we didn't actually see any women in command doesn't mean there weren't any, and thats if you exclude the existence of Number One and what that infers. Hell, we never got to see a toilet in TOS, but we know they had to have been there.
The failing after Number One was that of Gene Roddenberry and successive writers who didn't follow up on the idea. Did they do so consciously or not?
There is a question I have always hoped D.C. Fontana would be asked given she there: was it an actual policy on the show that women could not be cast in command roles or was it simply no one thought of it after "The Cage?" In extent during the series was the idea ever floated of casting a woman as a starship Captain or Commodore or Admiral and the idea dismissed or did it simply not occur to anyone?
On the issue of Uhura. By right of rank at some point she should have been told on at least one occasion to take the conn. Was it a deliberate act of exclusion to write it that way or did it simply not occur to the writers and creative staff that the Black woman is the more correct choice (by virtue of rank and experience) to take the conn rather than the junior white male?
TOS had an issue of (lack of) consistency which really isn't surprising given the changes in society going on when the show was in production. Indeed some of what McKenna says in "Embracing The Wind" speaks to this very point. But the underlying spiritual message of the show was positive and one of inclusiveness. So why not build on that rather than the worst interpretations of the show's inconsistencies in conveying said message?
And thats where STC falls down because they tried to rationalize the inconsistency rather than simply build on the underlying positive message.
Just because we didn't actually see any women in command doesn't mean there weren't any, and thats if you exclude the existence of Number One and what that infers. Hell, we never got to see a toilet in TOS, but we know they had to have been there.
Last edited: