I'm drawing a blank--does anyone recall specific tomes of lore, history, etc. that Klingons refer to or read within canon? I don't mean titles of books about Klingons that have been published, but books referenced within the episodes themselves.
Would the Klingon dictionary scene from Star Trek VI; The Undiscovered Country count? The crew of the Enterprise-A were using physical books to talk Klingon.
I prefer to ignore that scene altogether...
Dunno, considering that this is a franchise in which we got space hippies, a women villain who went insane and "who didn't know her place" per '60s "values," cartoon women who steal life force with headbands, Vulcans riding unicorns, people mutating into salamanders, transgender being played as a farce, and an Indian man whitewashed as British guy, that scene is hardly the worst or most embarrasing thing we've had to deal with.
Although, in this one particular case, it's mentioned in the film that Admiral Marcus had Khan surgically altered into "John Harrison" as a covert-ops thing, so there was a proper in-universe explanation given for it.and an Indian man whitewashed as British guy,
Although, in this one particular case, it's mentioned in the film that Admiral Marcus had Khan surgically altered into "John Harrison" as a covert-ops thing, so there was a proper in-universe explanation given for it.
Right before I posted that, just to be certain in case I was misremembering, I tried to double-check this over at Memory Alpha, whose entry for the Kelvin Timeline version of Khan interestingly says this:No, that's from a tie-in comic, not the movie. The film only says that Harrison was a "fiction" created by Admiral Marcus, "a smokescreen to conceal my true identity." It's never stated that his face was changed, although that's certainly plausible in the context of what was stated.
But for some reason, I missed this little sub-entry right beneath that paragraph (likely due to altered mobile-website formatting, which looks different on my desktop PC):Despite knowing Khan's history, Marcus decided to bring him out of cryogenic suspension, believing his savagery and superior intellect would be prime assets to his cause. Having his voice and physical appearance heavily altered, Khan was reawakened and recruited under the identity of Section 31 agent, "John Harrison". Marcus forced Khan into working with him by threatening to kill his fellow Augments, and set him to work designing weapons and ships for Starfleet, including the Dreadnought-class USS Vengeance.
Very peculiar that Memory Alpha is actually incorporating non-canonical info into their entries now, unless maybe this is something that slipped right past the admins there.
Very peculiar that Memory Alpha is actually incorporating non-canonical info into their entries now, unless maybe this is something that slipped right past the admins there. But yep -- I was definitely misremembering that one.
There's a difference between a scene that's just implausible and a scene that insults a main character's competence like that scene did for Uhura. Thirty years in Starfleet and she never learned Klingon?
And how is "Vulcans riding unicorns" anything less than awesome?
No, that's from a tie-in comic, not the movie. The film only says that Harrison was a "fiction" created by Admiral Marcus, "a smokescreen to conceal my true identity." It's never stated that his face was changed, although that's certainly plausible in the context of what was stated.
Of course, it should be kept in mind that Ricardo Montalban was a white man (Mexican but of Spanish parentage) who was painted in brownface to play Khan in "Space Seed," but then reprised the role with his natural complexion in TWOK. So the role has always been whitewashed. Besides, Sikhs are a religion rather than an ethnic group, so it's entirely possible for a Sikh to be Mexican or English or anything else. And the name "Khan Noonien Singh" is such a complete ethnic hodgepodge (first name that's usually a Muslim surname, middle name that's purportedly Chinese, with only the last name being Sikh) that there's no real way of definitively assigning an ethnicity to him. Since he was the result of a eugenics program, he could easily be of mixed heritage, which would explain his name.
Thing is, in the original show, it's stated that he was born in India. While he could've been an immigrant or biracial, it really seems like that wasn't the intent.
The fact that whitewashing may have been a factor in the '60s does not excuse the mistake of doing it in the present when the Powers That Be not only should've known better, but when it would be easier to find an actor of Indian heritage.
The real-world intent is one conversation; how things can be rationalized in-universe is a separate conversation. The topic on the table is in the latter category: whether cosmetic surgery is necessary to "explain" Khan's appearance in STID. I contend that it is not necessary, because Khan looked just as white in TWOK; it's only in "Space Seed" that he was painted brown, which makes that the anomaly out of the three.
I agree that would've been better (my vote was for Naveen Andrews). But that's the other conversation.
Critical research failure on behalf of the "Space Seed" writers.
A Sikh probably. A 'Sikh' is a member of the Sikh religion, not a racial type, any more than a Roman Catholic is a racial type. They are distinguish-able physically only because one of the tenets of their religion is that men do not shave or cut their hair.
...
Sibahl Khan Noonien – This name is not Sikh or Indian in form. 'Khan' is a Mongol title which has found its way into some Muslim names in India and Pakistan. For proper name suggest: Govind Bahadur Singh. All Sikhs use the name Singh after their own sir name.
I've known several people who have worked as advisors to TV shows. All they can do is advise, they can do nothing to force the producers to actually listen to them........
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