JANEWAY: Voyager's done too much for us.
TUVOK: Curious. I have never understood the human compulsion to emotionally bond with inanimate objects. This vessel has done nothing. It is an assemblage of bulkheads, conduits, tritanium. Nothing more.
JANEWAY: Oh, you're wrong. It's much more than that. This ship has been our home. It's kept us together. It's been part of our family. As illogical as this might sound, I feel as close to Voyager as I do to any other member of my crew. It's carried us, Tuvok - even nurtured us. And right now, it needs one of us.
Whether you're talking TOS, TNG or VOY, every one of those captains had a speech (or many speeches) about their ships, giving them personification and gender in a personal way. Deep Space Nine, by contrast, seemed to have much more limited personification throughout the series.
There were exceptions, without a doubt, especially when O'Brien was wrestling with all the malfunctions that were going on around the station, but it says a lot that when the Defiant came into the picture, that ship seemed to take on a deeper personification almost right away.
In modern terms, it seems more likely to personify a Navy ship rather than the base it launched from. Even though the DS9 runabouts served the purpose of being able to take the action elsewhere, was there a lack of connection with the station that also led the writers to introduce the Defiant? Even though the Defiant was new, it was also 100% Starfleet - not something inherited/taken over from someone else like the Cardassians, so building a bond was not difficult.
To me, that's part of the appeal of DS9: the long-term process of building the bond, rather than instantly showing off the state-of-the-art tricks in the 1st episode to impress you. Of all the ST series from the '90s and early 2000s, I think DS9 will be remembered as the most daring, the most different, and the most dynamic overall.
TUVOK: Curious. I have never understood the human compulsion to emotionally bond with inanimate objects. This vessel has done nothing. It is an assemblage of bulkheads, conduits, tritanium. Nothing more.
JANEWAY: Oh, you're wrong. It's much more than that. This ship has been our home. It's kept us together. It's been part of our family. As illogical as this might sound, I feel as close to Voyager as I do to any other member of my crew. It's carried us, Tuvok - even nurtured us. And right now, it needs one of us.
Whether you're talking TOS, TNG or VOY, every one of those captains had a speech (or many speeches) about their ships, giving them personification and gender in a personal way. Deep Space Nine, by contrast, seemed to have much more limited personification throughout the series.
There were exceptions, without a doubt, especially when O'Brien was wrestling with all the malfunctions that were going on around the station, but it says a lot that when the Defiant came into the picture, that ship seemed to take on a deeper personification almost right away.
In modern terms, it seems more likely to personify a Navy ship rather than the base it launched from. Even though the DS9 runabouts served the purpose of being able to take the action elsewhere, was there a lack of connection with the station that also led the writers to introduce the Defiant? Even though the Defiant was new, it was also 100% Starfleet - not something inherited/taken over from someone else like the Cardassians, so building a bond was not difficult.
To me, that's part of the appeal of DS9: the long-term process of building the bond, rather than instantly showing off the state-of-the-art tricks in the 1st episode to impress you. Of all the ST series from the '90s and early 2000s, I think DS9 will be remembered as the most daring, the most different, and the most dynamic overall.