^ Those are great!
Yes, because it become fantasy like LOTR and GOT. There is no real world analog for these things, so suspension of disbelief is a whole easier to maintain, vs. a production that states "we're in the future."Seems to me like the assumption is self-evidently invalid, though, especially given the success of fantasy properties like LOTR and GOT. (Indeed, I can't help but notice that fantasy in general has less of an issue with being "re-imagined." Perhaps the lack of any connection with the here-and-now frees it up somewhat? I'm not particularly a fan of Star Wars, but maybe there's something to the argument I've seen bandied about here that it's easier for that franchise to maintain its original eclectic look-and-feel precisely because it's space fantasy, set "a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.")
AMAZING VICTORIAN STAR-TREK PORTRAITS:
https://www.swaggerninja.com/amazing-victorian-star-trek-portraits/
I'm not sure I follow the reasoning here. Something completely foreign to everyday experience is easier to suspend disbelief in?Yes, because it become fantasy like LOTR and GOT. There is no real world analog for these things, so suspension of disbelief is a whole easier to maintain, vs. a production that states "we're in the future."
Yes if the characters are done well.I'm not sure I follow the reasoning here. Something completely foreign to everyday experience is easier to suspend disbelief in?
Because there is a point of reference, i.e how technology works.And if so... there's no real-world analogue for experiencing "the future," either, so I'm not sure where the difference lies.
I did some looking up. Even though they had drafting in the Civil War, only 2% of Union Soldiers were draftees. The vast majority of the military was volunteer. I also have Gene Roddenberry in his 40s. So he probably wouldn't be out there fighting. (link)
Gene Roddenberry's experiences during the Civil War would be those of a Civilian and whatever would influence his work would be from that perspective. Which would be as interesting as if he'd actually fought in the war, even though it wouldn't be quite the same.
On the other hand: he would've been the prime age for serving during the Mexican-American War (1846-1848). Land that was acquired through James K. Polk's wanting to carry out both Andrew Jackson's legacy and the concept of Manifest Destiny. The Whigs were opposed to the War and the fight for this land but then thought it wasn't such a bad idea after the fact once they had the land, even nominating General Zachary Taylor, who fought in the war, in 1848 as their candidate. I mention the Election of 1848 because I see Gene as being more of a Whig (and later a Republican) than a Democrat and wanted to put it into perspective. Or he might have been a Free-Soiler who turned Republican.
What would Mexican-American War Veteran Gene Roddenberry bring to the table?
* And I know Gene Roddenberry was born in Texas. But if his family immigrated to the United States from Ireland, they would've immigrated here pre-Texas joining the Union (in order for him to take up arms in the Mexican-American War), so he almost definitely would've lived in another state and might have even been born in wherever that state was. I'm putting him in the North only because I prefer Star Trek to not be a Confederate Vision of the Future.
If he's from Texas or Western (say, California, maybe even a 49er who failed to find gold but got into book publishing instead), then he most likely spent much of his youth fighting the Indians. Spock could be based on the idea of the "noble savage" (i.e. Tonto) but as an alien instead (possibly literally a half-Martian, as described in his original pitch).
If he's a Californian by the time of the Civil War, then he would likely be away from the front lines, still Union (but conflicted because of his roots), and be spurred into writing his ideas down in the lens of fantasy future fiction.
You could even have him stealing ideas from other authors and releasing them in dime (penny?) novels, when those become popular.
At what point did people start seriously imagining intelligent life on other planets? And when did it become friendly intelligent life as opposed to monstrous enemies? Somewhere around the turn of the century?
I know Mormonism has had the idea since about the mid-1830's. Of course that was commonly understood to mean children of God, just like humans, or exalted humans. There is a story attributed to Joseph Smith, Jr., the founder of Mormonism, about six feet tall people who lived to a thousand years old, dressed similar to Quakers, who lived on the moon. Though it's highly doubtful this story is accurate considering it was told many decades later. But it shows that people were at least thinking of the concept that early on.
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