Does not make it correct.Reads that way.
Reads that way.
From what we have seen from tech you would think the ability to help people who can't walk would most likely be more evolved than needing a wheelchair but that's never a good reason to do something. It's more interesting for drama and symbolism and all that to still use a wheelchair. Even when Nog lost a leg and the grew him a new one they were smart to give him a cane and to have him say he still feels pain. You don't want tech to take away human experiences.
I recall Pike being in that contraption and it was awful! Plus his character was shown to be suffering as opposed to the suggestion of this new character on Discovery who we should expect to be shown as competently doing her job. I'm not satisfied the Pike 'chair' or comparison is relevant.I concur. Someone made that argument directly earlier in the thread:
Several other people then replied questioning the idea that a wheelchair would be outmoded in the 23rd century.
As I've said, IMHO the best solution would be if Tig Notoro's character had some sort of light exoskeleton on her lower extremities which could be removed when in her quarters. It would allow the character (and actor) full mobility, yet still signal to the audience the disability. Which is exactly what Geordi's VISOR was - something completely unlike how blind people deal with the world today, but still a technological signifier of blindness.
A "hoverchair" would be much more useful in a wide array of situations than a wheelchair, but compared to an exoskeleton it's still going to be a bit bulky and unwieldy. What if she's on an away mission and needs to crawl through a tight tunnel? Sure, a chief engineer goes on less away missions (particularly on DIS I'm guessing - I don't think Stamets left the ship once in Season 1) but it's still a character limitation. I'm guessing that if she becomes a long-term character the writers will want some way around it, like they did with The Doctor on VOY with the mobile emitter.
Star Trek Discovery is not set in the real world of now, why should disabled people not have the same vision of hope and fantasy for a better way, than able bodied people? Why should they be locked down to the struggles they may already be living? Geordi La Forge was blind but his future was not.
I disagree. The whole point of representation in my opinion should not hinge on creating a divide, if it does then it is failing. If an able bodied person can have a future beyond what they have now then by denying the same for one who is disabled may very well be this lesson in human experience, but it requires keeping someone else down. If I can watch Star Trek and imagine freedoms beyond my current ones (and that is not expecting perfection), then I expect others to be able to as well.Because that's the whole point of representation, to examine the human experience onscreen. It's what trek has always done. Geordie could have had his vision back and been "normalised" any time he wanted. He chose not to because he found value and worth in himself without having to be brought in line with some normative model of humanity. Doing that would have taken away everything that made the character so important.
The federation has never really been an image of a perfect future free of challenges, nor has it been intended that way. What it has been is a background for examining humanity and our challenges, not using magical hand waving technology to write those challenges out of existence. The tech is there to serve the story, not to be served at the expense of that story.
It's just possible that their only hope for the future isn't a cure - disabled people might have other dreams and hopes which they like seeing somebody who is like them fulfilling. They are more than their disability.Star Trek Discovery is not set in the real world of now, why should disabled people not have the same vision of hope and fantasy for a better way, than able bodied people?
I disagree. The whole point of representation in my opinion should not hinge on creating a divide, if it does then it is failing. If an able bodied person can have a future beyond what they have now then by denying the same for one who is disabled may very well be this lesson in human experience, but it requires keeping someone else down. If I can watch Star Trek and imagine freedoms beyond my current ones (and that is not expecting perfection), then I expect others to be able to as well.
Cured? I thought people were talking about technology...
I like eschaton's idea of an exoskeleton.Why not do a progression from wheelchair (simple but allows a quick visual shorthand) and then the character is moving on up as resources are made more available as the war winds down?
I like eschaton's idea of an exoskeleton.
No.So again, writing the whole experience of disability out of the equation?
No.Yes.
No.
Consider this (from eschaton):
*As I've said, IMHO the best solution would be if Tig Notoro's character had some sort of light exoskeleton on her lower extremities which could be removed when in her quarters. It would allow the character (and actor) full mobility, yet still signal to the audience the disability. Which is exactly what Geordi's VISOR was - something completely unlike how blind people deal with the world today, but still a technological signifier of blindness.*
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