
They are primitive barbarians who by pure chance are sitting on a find the white man wants. They also have a plot conveinent transporter device, but that's curiosially at odds with the largely tribalistic portrayal of their society.And they certainly weren't portrayed as "savage;" they had a high technology.
See, here's where I think the stereotypes are not on the part of the episode. Why does a highly technological society have to look and dress and talk like present-day America or Europe? Why assume that their clothes and their accents are automatically "primitive" and "tribal" just because they're more African than Western?
Yes, they're portrayed as less advanced than the 24th-century Federation, but they have transporters and energy beams and clearly represent a technology in advance of what we have in the present. Hardly primitive. And where do you get "tribal" from? What connection could that possibly have to the social organization actually depicted in the episode? "Highly structured," analogous to Sung-Dynasty China (I misspoke when I said Ming), a society where women own land and men protect and rule it, a world with a planetary government... nothing in that is "tribal," a word referring to a non-state or pre-state level of social organization based on kinship ties. You're just using that as a derogatory label rather than an anthropologically accurate designation.
See, the problem isn't just with the episode, it's with society. The script depicted a culture that was an amalgam of numerous non-Western Earth civilizations, with elements of China, Native American societies, and so forth. I think if the actors had been white like in an old-school Trek episode, viewers would've had no problem accepting the culture as written as one that was merely exotic. But they cast black actors and had them use African accents, and suddenly the viewers projected all sorts of racist assumptions and expectations onto the episode. There's nothing in the script that suggests tribalism, but your preconceptions equate that word with images of Africans in traditional garb or something similar. Now, maybe it was a mistake on the part of the people who produced the episode not to recognize what a quagmire they were stepping in with their casting, but the ultimate fault here is spread much more widely.
Very good post...
It's chiefly the racism (savage black men want white woh-mon), though even besides that it's a pretty goofy hour of TV.I can't see what's so bad about it.
Isn't there another thread speaking about this same episode...? Going over the same things?
Lutan wasn't savage at all....
...and there is nothing wrong with him going after Tasha Yar...(So what? Black man goes after a white woman! *gasp*)
I'm a black man going after Asian women! (Am I considered savage for 'dating out'?)
Trek has had white men going after women of other races (black, Asian, etc) for decades, and they weren't considered savage....
I think you and I chatted about this as well, Kegg....

General sidenote to no one in particular: And how did we get from talking about the 'episode soundtracks' to 'black men or dark-skinned men who go after women of other races are considered savages'....or what have you...?

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