Thank you personal belittling never furthers a discussion.My apologies,
But it is acknowledging that person's experience in the real world. It's acknowledging that such limits happen, that such people do have struggles and are acknowledged as still contributing in the future.Confining a disabled character to archaic technology is not improving anything.
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.
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.
Yes. Real people don't have that option, it doesn't reflect their experience or honour the way so many strive to find a place in the world despite their disability. It doesn't explore the way that world can and should adapt to meet their needs and how often that is made difficult by exactly the sort of ignorance shows like trek endeavour to dismiss. Star Trek isn't about the future and stupid pseudo technology, it's about people.
It would literally be like reducing representation for gay people to synthesising a magic pill to make them straight, thus removing any reason to represent the reality of the human being behind the label, it would be offensive and arrogant. We are talking about marginalised groups who deserve to be represented onscreen, not edited out of existence.
It also caused him a lot of pain too. Of course, it only came up if the plot demanded it but the VISOR was hardly a perfect system.Geordi was, for all intents and purposes, not blind - at least not in the sense of today. Yes, his VISOR gave him different vision than normal signed humans, but in many ways it was superior (I'd consider swapping my eyes out for it if given the chance).
But it is acknowledging that person's experience in the real world. It's acknowledging that such limits happen, that such people do have struggles and are acknowledged as still contributing in the future.
I'm not the most sensitive guy, but honestly, it seems like the only point of contention here is the wheelchair. I mean, we have seen wheelchairs in Trek multiple times (On ENT, on TOS and DS9), we have seen the use of a cane, so I'm not sure why this is such a point of contention.
Let me see if I can frame this in a way that makes sense. A lot of the above listed lack of representation are not physical issues but cultural ones. Religion, socioeconomic and attitudes towards women are all cultural issues that have largely been either resolved or unmentioned in the larger Trek universe.If Trek was completely representative, the whole setting would unwind.
Take class for example. Class is certainly a big contemporary issue - even moreso in your own country than mine. The Federation is basically a post-capitalist society, from what we can gather onscreen. There is no real "working class" unless you want to use NCOs like O'Brien as analogies. The only story I can think of offhand which actually dealt with class struggle was one of the Ferengi episodes of DS9 - Bar Association - which was a wonderful tribute to trade unionism. Regardless, the lack of any identifiable working class means there are not stories that those of us who grew up poor can relate to. Hence it's not fully representational.
Another example, as I said upthread, is religion, which seems mostly dead in Trek. I was corrected that there were a few more (nominal) Christians in Trek than I remembered, but there are no Jews, Muslims, Hindus, etc.
People of different (human) races and genders are portrayed in Trek of course. But since it's a post racist/sexist world, all of the struggles they have to endure today are not touched upon at all. No woman in Trek ever has to worry about being harassed by her commanding officer. No person of color ever has to worry they have been passed over for a promotion due to the color of their skin. This is not representational of current struggles.
And not to be flip, but we don't really see that many overweight or unattractive people in Trek either.
As I have said upthread, I have met many deaf people who don't want to hear, but I have never met a mobility challenged person who doesn't want to walk. Hell, my grandmother has polio, and my father had MS before he died and was confined to a wheelchair. They both would have much rather not be confined/not have been disabled at all than just have the world around them more accepting of them the way they are.
But please, link to some essay with a paralyzed person who says they don't want to ever walk again. I'd love to read the perspective.
Dude, you know that exoskeletons for the paralyzed already exist right? They cost tens of thousands of dollars, and only a few hundred have been sold, but this is not some far-future technology. The costs are likely to come down quickly, and they very well may be more common than wheelchairs for the paralyzed in another 20 years or so. That's one of the reasons I think not including it is a mistake. Hopefully people will still be watching DIS 20 years hence like the other shows, and if they are, it will look like a silly call to have not included it.
I've read science-fiction stories before where changing sexuality (or gender, for that matter) is as easy as taking a pill or flipping a switch. Some were written by queer writers.
Why then insult disabled people by taking away their opportunity to be represented onscreen in a way which fosters understanding and tolerance? That is exactly what we are doing if we show magic quick fixes to disabilities, insulting people by taking away realistic and meaningful representation which is priceless to them.
But no one is going to be able to walk as a result of showing magical imaginary technology which does that to a fictional character. What we are talking about is showing someone onscreen as a positive example of inclusivity, about showing someone's experience of the real world in a way which opens people's eyes to the experience of being disabled. Technobabble which solves the problem with the flick of a switch just removes the purpose of that representation.
It's hard to understand why this point is so difficult to explain to people. You wouldn't suggest racial equality that consisted of having black people being given surgery to become white and avoid racism. You wouldn't suggest gay people can be shown avoiding homophobia by becoming straight with a tablet. You accept representation for those groups involves showing them onscreen as they are, as positive examples of human beings who are neither defined by a label nor using magical technology to change.
Why then insult disabled people by taking away their opportunity to be represented onscreen in a way which fosters understanding and tolerance? That is exactly what we are doing if we show magic quick fixes to disabilities, insulting people by taking away realistic and meaningful representation which is priceless to them.
Again, missing the point by a mile.
Yes they do, and I guarantee if any exoskeleton wearers are viewing trek they are outnumbered a thousand to one by wheelchair users who aren't so fortunate. I'd hate to think any of them would object to seeing someone in a wheelchair. Star Trek addresses issues NOW, not in twenty years, not in two hundred.
So?
Does that mean Trek should do the same?
Did any of those novels endorse changing sexuality to avoid stigma and fit in to a norm?
If the Culture novels are amongst those you mean they deal with the matter in a totally different way to Star Trek. They do show a genuine utopian society, which the Federation is not no matter how often people claim otherwise. Changing sexuality or gender is done there for pleasure and to promote understanding of other's experiences, it's recreational. Iain Banks was singularly careful to avoid attaching any value judgements to those transitions, he also made no claim to addressing social issues in the way Star Trek does.
There is a fundamental conflict between what Trek is, and the desire for human representation of contemporary issues. Yes, there are still issues in the future, but the whole conceit is that Humanity has made great strides, therefore our most pressing issues (war, poverty, disease, disability) have been fixed. That's where the allegory comes in. The alien who cant walk in regular gravity is a human in a wheelchair. Saru is a human with anxiety. If one of the little gold aliens from Journey to Babel was a crew member he'd be human with dwarfism (or whatever your preferred term is). That's the whole point of the show. Just because the person has latex on their face doesn't make them any less representative of your group of choice.
Yes and no.
In so far as we are talking about allegory around issues I totally agree, but we aren't talking about "issues" and we aren't talking about a society which is portrayed as having made anywhere near the strides that are commonly supposed. On the contrary much of the Federation is a disease and crime ridden dump suffering civil wars, terrorism and famines whilst suffering under petty bureaucrats, power mad planetary governors and ambitious, corrupt officials. Anyone who claims otherwise really should review the show as seen onscreen and not the mythology which has built up around it.
Equally TOS was far more important culturally for showing women, black people, asian people, russian people in positions of respect and influence than it was was parodying US foreign policy or the cold war.
We aren't talking about issues or moral questions being addressed on screen here, we are talking about showing disabled people as being active and valued members of the society which solves those issues.
The technology argument is ridiculous on a level which mirrors questioning how many decks the Enterprise has or how fast a Bird of Prey is. Trek isn't about the technology (it portrays it inconsistently anyway), nor is it really about the worldbuilding. It does both patchily precisely because they have always played second fiddle to the social conscience of the show. Being seen onscreen in a positive way is radically important to many disabled people and that is what matters here, not if the technology fits with "canon".
But no one is going to be able to walk as a result of showing magical imaginary technology which does that to a fictional character. What we are talking about is showing someone onscreen as a positive example of inclusivity, about showing someone's experience of the real world in a way which opens people's eyes to the experience of being disabled. Technobabble which solves the problem with the flick of a switch just removes the purpose of that representation.
It's hard to understand why this point is so difficult to explain to people. You wouldn't suggest racial equality that consisted of having black people being given surgery to become white and avoid racism. You wouldn't suggest gay people can be shown avoiding homophobia by becoming straight with a tablet. You accept representation for those groups involves showing them onscreen as they are, as positive examples of human beings who are neither defined by a label nor using magical technology to change.
Why then insult disabled people by taking away their opportunity to be represented onscreen in a way which fosters understanding and tolerance? That is exactly what we are doing if we show magic quick fixes to disabilities, insulting people by taking away realistic and meaningful representation which is priceless to them.
Yes they do, and I guarantee if any exoskeleton wearers are viewing trek they are outnumbered a thousand to one by wheelchair users who aren't so fortunate. I'd hate to think any of them would object to seeing someone in a wheelchair. Star Trek addresses issues NOW, not in twenty years, not in two hundred.
If the Culture novels are amongst those you mean they deal with the matter in a totally different way to Star Trek. They do show a genuine utopian society, which the Federation is not no matter how often people claim otherwise. Changing sexuality or gender is done there for pleasure and to promote understanding of other's experiences, it's recreational. Iain Banks was singularly careful to avoid attaching any value judgements to those transitions, he also made no claim to addressing social issues in the way Star Trek does.
Because disabled people are...well...disabled. That's not to devalue them as people - I pushed my father around in a wheelchair for the better part of a decade. But the problems they face are not 100% due to society being close minded and intolerant.
Could you please explain to me why depicting an actor who uses a system of robotic braces to assist in walking takes away from the disabled status, while a wheelchair does not?
Let's say you strand a gay person, or a black person, on a desert island. They will be just as likely to be able to survive as a straight person, or a white person. In contrast, if someone who is blind, or paralyzed washes up onshore, they will have a much harder time of it. This isn't because of society - this is because their physical abilities are more limited, and impact their ability to get food and fresh water and find shelter. Disabled people can only live lives that are as full as they are today because of technological innovations, from the wheelchair and ramps to braille and seeing eye dogs. Innovations in technology and cultural practices - whether helping the individual or modifying the environment around them - is the primary way that the lives for disabled people have gotten better in the past.
What issues does Trek address NOW in a literal fashion? Seriously. When addressing contemporary issues in the past, it's almost always been through allegory, not an on-the-nose depiction. Look at The Outcast, Let that Be Your Last Battlefield, etc.
To be frank, most of them are. If you can't see that the stigma attached to disability is commonly way more intrusive, isolating and debilitating, causing way more inequalities than the actual disability itself I don't really know what to tell you. Try spending a few weeks in the shoes of someone with paranoid schizophrenia, autism or multiple sclerosis and tell me their exclusion doesn't primarily come down to people being closed minded.
Showing someone magically transformed by fictional technology doesn't help one person in the real world, the technology isn't somehow going to jump off the screen and help real people walk. It just takes away their chance to be meaningfully represented. Aren't the disabled alienated from society enough without you taking this from them too? Do you have any idea how cruel that is?
Geordie did not have normal vision, far from it, he was numerous times shown to be incapable of appreciating beauty, of comprehending the visual world in the way other characters could, it was a recurring theme throughout TNG and the movies. He was important as an example of representation because he was valued in spite of that, of being an example of how disabilities can become strengths. Yes it did it with technology but it didn't just take the disability away and frankly as @cultcross points out, there's no reason to rest on our laurels there and assume we can't go on to improve on that portrayal.
Because if it does what is stated on the tin and the character can act just like everyone else it takes away everything meaningful about the portrayal of the disability, the label is all that is left. If it doesn't, why not just stay with the wheelchair and give a more realistic portrayal that actual reflects people's experiences?
Showing someone magically transformed by fictional technology doesn't help one person in the real world, the technology isn't somehow going to jump off the screen and help real people walk. It just takes away their chance to be meaningfully represented. Aren't the disabled alienated from society enough without you taking this from them too? Do you have any idea how cruel that is?
This is almost totally wrong.
I wonder how many times am I going to repeat to you representation isn't about "issues"? That you keep using that word is really offensive. It must be six or seven times in the past few days. Star Trek blazed the trail for onscreen inclusiveness, it's exactly what it is famous for.
We are talking about showing characters onscreen in a positive way. It does it with race, it does it with gender, it's finally and belatedly started doing it with sexuality. Those things have come about because of people within those groups repeating ad infinitum treating them as "issues" is missing the point until finally someone got the message. They spent years beating their heads against metaphorical brick walls much like I'm doing now with you until it started to sink in.
Members of minority groups aren't "issues", they are people and deserve to be treated equally, not reduced to ethical conundrum of the week.
Star Trek addresses issues NOW, not in twenty years, not in two hundred.
Trek tech has inspired real world breakthroughs. Someone sees this "magical" tech as says "I can use that idea in the real world". Besides, isn't the alternative saying "there's no hope for improvement, we can't even cure you in the 24th century".
If I'm reading this right, you'd be OK with, say, a paralyzed person in Iron Man style armor because it makes them stronger than average, but still doesn't let them feel anything, so they still "count" as disabled.
If trek is to demonstrate anything like the social conscience it is renowned for it should do so by doing exactly what it has done in the past, what other shows have taken the lead on in recent years. It should show the world what it means to experience disability, present those people as more than a label, more than a "problem" to be solved.
You could basically do all the same things with a exoskeleton/brace system as Geordi's VISOR. You could have the character take it off at night. You could have it have side effects like pain if worn too long. You could have it fail to function at mission-critical times. And you could have it give certain powers beyond normally able people (maybe the character could kick with superhuman force, or lift large weight with their legs?). There's no reason why it would have to be portrayed as identical to normal mobility. There's a middle ground between "absolutely no progress - nay, regression - from today" and "every single medical problem is solved"
You were the one who said:
I understand there is a difference between representation and an "issue episode" but you referred to issues, which is why I brought it up.
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