It's possible but that's not the effect it had on me. I found troubling that her sexuality could be "cured" so easily.
I just assumed as an alien race they had some kind of advanced brainwashing technology or something. They did need to alter Soran quickly to get the dramatic effect of seeing her after her conditioning.
I think the dramatic effect would have been better had she looked broken in the end, like someone who's suffered a big loss, instead of a happy clappy born again hermaphrodite, if you see what I mean.
To me it looks like they tried to cater to both sides, so that some people could say "See? even they think that abnormal sexuality can be cured through psychiatric/chemical treatment."
I just assumed as an alien race they had some kind of advanced brainwashing technology or something. They did need to alter Soran quickly to get the dramatic effect of seeing her after her conditioning.
I think the dramatic effect would have been better had she looked broken in the end, like someone who's suffered a big loss, instead of a happy clappy born again hermaphrodite, if you see what I mean.
To me it looks like they tried to cater to both sides, so that some people could say "See? even they think that abnormal sexuality can be cured through psychiatric/chemical treatment."
The problem is that if Soran had looked broken then Riker would've tried to rescue her. They weren't going to let their hero leave Soran when she clearly needed rescuing.
By having the brainwashing be so complete she no longer wanted to be rescued, there wasn't much Riker could do.
I can see what you mean about the interpretation that the treatment worked. Even though the message of the story seemed to be that she already was normal as she was and didn't need treatment, a story told thru metaphors is open to interpretation.
The more I think about it, especially in the context of Berman Trek, the more I agree with kirkfan. The ending is too open and it lets people on both sides walk away thinking their position is correct. It's very milquetoast.
The more I think about it, especially in the context of Berman Trek, the more I agree with kirkfan. The ending is too open and it lets people on both sides walk away thinking their position is correct. It's very milquetoast.
I think Enterprise's Stigma does a much better job at denouncing the prejudice, for one thing the melders are not "cured", they are simply ostracized.
Just the opposite, the problem Soren's society had with her is that she identified with her actual gender, the society was officially androgynous, Soren understood that she was female.In retrospect, The Outcast feels more like a transgender episode than a gay episode. She identified with a gender she wasn't born with, and Riker accepted her as that gender before her culture brainwashed her into accepting her biological gender.
Well, now you're conflating sexuality with AIDS. As far as the Enterprise episode it was criticized heavily for taking on a 1980's problem in the 2000s. By then hundreds of movies and tv shows had tackled the issue. Enterprise was not making much of a statement.
That was my understanding as well.There was never any plan for Soren to identify as male. The original plan was to have Soren identify as female but be played by a male actor.
There was never any plan for Soren to identify as male. The original plan was to have Soren identify as female but be played by a male actor.
There was never any plan for Soren to identify as male. The original plan was to have Soren identify as female but be played by a male actor.
Everything else wouldn't have made sense. Riker was heterosexual and him suddenly "becoming gay" for Soren would just have perpetuated other misconceptions about homosexuality (that it can act like a virus or that sexuality can shift easily)
Or it would have meant that Riker either always was gay or always was bisexual and in denial about it, which would have meant major consequences for his character that could not have been undone by next week, and I don't think they were willing to do that.
Though, I recently saw the episode and the conversation Will has with Deanna who tells him "nothing has changed and they will always be friends" does sound a little bit like Will was coming out to her![]()
Okay you're not getting it.Everything else wouldn't have made sense. Riker was heterosexual and him suddenly "becoming gay" for Soren ...There was never any plan for Soren to identify as male. The original plan was to have Soren identify as female but be played by a male actor.
Okay you're not getting it.
Soren was a female, the idea was in order to emphasize the androgynous aspect of the character the part would be cast with a male actor.
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