And I'm sure he hated every minute of it![]()
Sex with a slave is rape by definition. I don't see anything funny in that.
And I'm sure he hated every minute of it![]()
Sex with a slave is rape by definition. I don't see anything funny in that.
But that's just what I'm saying -- I don't understand your conceptual leap from "assertive" to "dominating." Lara didn't strike me as all that much more forward than the other women who chased Kirk. I certainly didn't find her assertiveness off-putting, and I don't think any well-adjusted, emotionally secure man would. (And some of us find strong, commanding women quite alluring. I think Kirk would prefer a mate who was his equal in all respects.)
Ok, I guess when you put it that way. I always assumed it was consensual because I don't believe Captain Kirk would have had sex with her if he felt he was forcing her in any way.
Normally, Kirk wasn't written as sinking to that level; by '60s standards, he was a perfect gentleman. But Drusilla was the exception.
As I recall, the episode title card was the only place where the term appeared. To the best of my recollection, it was never pronounced, much less defined, in any of the dialogue. I think ADF barely mentioned it in the book.Still, I did a Google Ngram search, and the pre-1973 English-language usages I find do seem to be limited to scholarly works and translations, and maybe a few works connected to African-American political activism. So it probably wasn't a term in everyday use, maybe something people had come across in history or sociology class.
I just never thought of the scene in those terms because I always believe that he would never force himself on someone unwilling.
I think ADF barely mentioned it in the book.
BTW, I think somebody raised a question about Loom Aleek-Om, from "Yesteryear"; the general consensus is that he was an Aurelian, rather than a Skorr (and that's how he was identified in the script).
I don't mind strong, attractive women. But if one came up to me such as Lara did with Kirk I might be like "woe, slow down just a bit, I'd like to get to know you a bit first".
Yes Lara was way too assertive for me.
She was no more assertive than most '60s, '70s, or '80s TV male leads were toward their various love interests of the week. It seems like a double standard to have a problem with that.
But I don't see why it's a double standard.
Finding the same behavior expected in a man but unacceptable in a woman is the very definition of a double standard.
Lara's forward nature may have taken him aback a bit. He had no time to explore it or adjust his approach. The fate of the galaxy and all...
Nichelle Nichols' Lara was hilarious. She was so into Kirk but he had ZERO time for her. Must have been those big eyebrows.
Good point. Why did they call it that, and not "The Crusade"? My guess is because foreign word = alien undertones. It doesn't have the same mystique it once did now that it pops up all the time in the news these days.
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