I’ve always held that when you watch
Star Trek you have to realize that it’s an US-American production made for an US-American audience. Certainly that was the case before the current era of shows made for international streaming. And I think that that is fine.
It’s certainly
nice and appreciated when they manage to portray a future that feels more international and diverse, but at the end of the day it’s a TV show and not a realistic extrapolation of what the
real future will or should look like. I’m personally taking what I see presented in the shows as less literal. In other words, I’m suspending my disbelief and focus on the story being told and the messages they might try to convey. I have a hard time seeing it as “ignorance” when US-American writers decide they want to portray military structures or court proceedings in a way that’s going to be familiar to their US-American audience. That their court episodes feel like
Law & Order isn’t by accident. I agree that that leads to a perception of Starfleet as “US-Americans in space”, but I don’t find that as problematic.
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I rewatched
Voyager’s “Warlord” last night, because I was curious how they were managing the implications of a male character presenting in a female body. I think the most objectionable parts to my 21st century ears were how they constantly refer to Kes — a grown-up woman in the context of the show — as a “little girl” in a pejorative way. It also doesn’t really make sense in the reality of the episode, if you think about it, because Tieran is benefiting from her mental abilities throughout the entire story. But okay, I get that they had him say that to make him more obviously evil.
There’s a moment almost at the end where Tieran-Kes is implying he wants to have a threesome with his wife and new husband, which certainly feels like the writers playing up bisexuality or polyamory as a “deviant” and “evil” trait, much in the same way
Deep Space Nine portrays lesbians in the Mirror Universe.
Just in general it’s interesting to note that if you think about it the situation is basically like Kes becoming a survivor of physical/sexual assault, which of course the episode doesn’t acknowledge. But then again, Kes is instrumental in breaking herself free from Tieran’s attack, so in that way it’s also pretty strong. This is one of these moments where the Reset Button premise of the show kinda works against the strength of the plot, because realistically Kes would have to deal with this well beyond this one episode.
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On
Enterprise they also had “Cogenitor”, another attempt at tackling LGBTQ+ issues I didn’t see anyone mention yet. The cogenitor is clearly a stand in for non-binary people, even though they seem to muddle sex and gender again. Haven’t watched it in a million year, but I remember general liking it/finding it powerful. Even though the ending doesn't make Archer look particularly good,
as Jessie Gender criticizes. Will give that one a rewatch too as soon as I can to see how I feel about it today.