murder, rape, and the potential for being murdered or raped
I never have understood why some fans believe that the pon farr process naturally culminates in rape. If Spock remained in the blood fever, you might have a point, however.
Well, look at Amok Time. Spock comes to Vulcan and finds out T'Pring's taken. In a normal society, Spock is pissed, but bows out, or he kills Stonn, and goes to prison, because violence is frowned upon. In Vulcan society, the same situation generates a duel. Fair enough.
Bow I suppose the duel could have been essentially about revenge--the Vulcan equivalent of shooting your wife's lover when you catch him in your bed, but socially sanctioned. Now revenge and spite are surprisingly selected for in human populations, and that could work.
But it's pretty much explicitly said that T'Pring is going home with the winner--
regardless of her choice. She only gets out of it because she chooses a stand-in for Stonn who will either kill Spock and want nothing to do with her, or die and make Spock too sad to screw.
Now maybe this isn't rape in the human, American legal sense--it comes very close--but it certainly degrades female consent in the basest way.
Now I suppose there is an alternative--all or many Vulcan females are cruel, calculating, and above all
shallow beings who impute sexual value only to physical prowess (and, surely in many cases, dumb luck), and thus will happily mate with the strongest available male, as "proven" through a fight to the death. This is almost as ugly as the rape scenario.
Spock doesn't enter the blood fever until after T'Pring issues the challenge, up until then he was in at least partial control of himself. The blood fever might not be a common part of pon farr if there is no challenge. After combat the need for the blood fever disappears, Spock might not have been completely freed of the effects of pon farr yet, but he had re-obtained the level of rational thought that he arrived at the arena with and that would have stayed with him if T'Pring had simply accepted the marriage.
I'm not describing the mechanics. If Vulcans like rough sex, that's their business. I'm talking about consent. Gagging and slapping are unto bread and butter if there's consent; the most staid missionary sex in the world is a monstrous thing if either party is refused the right to refuse.
Vulcan could be a dangerous place, especially during primitive times. If two females become pregnant by two (different) males. One male only has a psychological compulsion for sexual activity. The other male has a psychological compulsion to form and maintain a family unit. Of the resulting two children, one with a single parent, one with two parents, which one statistically has a better chance to grow up and pass on it's genes? Easy, the child with the genes to compulsively form a family unit.
But the slutty Vulcan female would be rewarded for polyandry, given the males' reproductive limitations. Of course, there's some thought that says females have the same cycle, but I find it hard to buy, amongst other things because of the synching problems, and childhood bonding is
not a magic bullet for that, because of death, disease, splitting up, and so forth.
At the same time, wouldn't marriage or challenge skew the sex ratios a bit? That is, with dead Stonns littering the field, won't there be unmarried females wandering around?
Maybe not. Of the three friends that I have who are in arranged marriages, the intended spouse was always from the same town (in India), and usual a forth cousin. Arranged marriages throughout history tend to be inside of some kind of group, race, religion, money, social. If Spock's family was important (T'Pau), it's likely T'Pring's was too. And they might have been distant cousins as well.
Nothing wrong with fourth cousins. We're all cousins, eventually. Even first cousin pairings are not as deleterious as people make out, though all else being equal they should be avoided as a first option.
T'Pau's comments to Kirk seem to imply that T'Pring could have chosen any of the male's in the arena, in historic times this would have prevented a bride from having to marry a weak groom to whom she had been bonded to as a child. In ancient times there might have been a free for all of combat.
Although it raises a question--why risk life and limb (or commit brutality and murder) for a mate when you're not personally in season? Do they all go at once? If so, the whole planet should be an orgy of destruction, and also a regular orgy.
And to no one in particular I will mention again how utterly boneheaded the Voyager take on pon farr was. Spock was a big enough jerk in Amok Time, but VOY tells us all he needed was an exotic massage. Or maybe Chapel could've worn a T'Pring mask. Totally lame.
DGCatAniSiri said:
Though I admit that there's a flaw in this theory by way of young Spock going through Pon Farr in TSfS...
Oh snap. That's true.
Timo said:
We never saw Sarek in the throes of pon farr when he was married to Amanda or Perrin.
Plus, he totally knocked some Vulcan princess. We can infer 1)he "cheated" on Amanda (because he had to, and she's cool with it because she's a cool old lady); or 2)divorce is a socially and legally acceptable option. Which introduces problems for lifelong bonding theories, etc.
Iirc, there's also some evidence that there's a third son of Sarek that Picard met. Although that could've just been Spock, or yet another frankencreature cobbled together from Vulcan and human parts, there's no particular reason to disbelieve that he had a working arrangement with some unwed or polyandrous Vulcan chick.
StarryEyed said:
I just re-watched Amok Time. McCoy speculated that PonFar was a consequence of emotional suppression but nothing more conclusive than that. So we don't know.
McCoy's also kind of an idiot who'd never heard of pon farr before Spock got sick--which is an annoying plot hole, because I don't think McCoy's an idiot, and he should have known or suspected pretty much immediately. Can you imagine the task of hiding the sexual behavior of a species of billions with a range over dozens or hundreds of planets. This isn't the mating rituals of some rare termite species found only in a hole in the ground somewhere in the deepest Congo, it's the dominant, most visible species on their planet. And humans are curious about such things--"how do you fuck?", I suspect, would be in the top two or three questions we would ask any aliens about their own biology. If they evaded, we would find out by hook or crook. Or even by reading a book.
Also, I think he was being poetic.