ENT established that there were female Starship captains long before Kirk's time. Janice Lester was just nuts.
I'm pretty sure there was a female admiral in the first ST movie unless I'm remebereing wrongly.
Only in the novelization ...
If Pike had been killed on duty during a deep space assignment, it's a bit stupid if Number One wasn't even permitted to captain the ship home ...
Don't believe a word of what loopy Janice Lester says!
This much is wrong. We did see women wearing gold once the familiar red, gold, and blue color scheme came in. Uhura, for one, was seen wearing gold for an episode or two into that scheme, IIRC. And I distinctly remember at least one other, a navigator or helmswoman in "That Which Survives", IIRC.We never saw a female Starfleet officer [...] wearing command gold (other than the eps where ops was wearing gold, too), during The Original Series.
Uhura, for one, was seen wearing gold for an episode or two into that scheme, IIRC. And I distinctly remember at least one other, a navigator or helmswoman in "That Which Survives", IIRC.
Only in the novelization ...
Yep ... the non-canonical novelization.
If Pike had been killed on duty during a deep space assignment, it's a bit stupid if Number One wasn't even permitted to captain the ship home ...
No assumption of that sort is necessary.
Remember, Enterprise had seven wounded and three dead from an encounter at Rigel VII as "The Cage" opened. Number One is a title given to an X-O, granted ... but it's quite possible that she was merely acting X-O, standing capably in for the dead or horribly wounded first officer struck down on Rigel. [The latter seems much more likely, in that Pike would have said, "including my own first officer and yeoman" when speaking about the deceased to Boyce early on if the X-O had been killed.]
In addition, the lady's called not only "Number One" during the episode, but "Lieutenant" at least once as well. If so, it's highly unlikely that a mere lieutenant would be permanent executive officer on a capital starship—especially when Enterprise is clearly meant to be one of Earth's best ships-of-the-line. Are we to accept that not a single commander or lieutenant commander in the entire fleet is available to hold that X-O slot?
Don't believe a word of what loopy Janice Lester says!
Well, considering that Kirk essentially agreed with her on that point, and that the tone of the ep supported "no females in command," well ....
We never saw a female Starfleet officer over the rank of lieutenant, or one wearing command gold (other than the eps where ops was wearing gold, too), during The Original Series. Inferring that they pervaded the command structure at its highest levels is an entirely unnecessary attempt to impose political correctness and modern sensibilities on a series written in the sixties.
It's also possible women commanded on tugs, freighters, corvettes, frigates, etc. ... just not starships.
Again, Lester might simply have been crazy ... but the alternative is not only reasonable, it's plausible.
The year we were together at Starfleet is the only time in my life I was alive.
and after janice switches place with kirk
You had your chance, Captain Kirk. You should've smothered the life in me. Then they would have said Doctor Janice Lester died of radiation poisoning in the line of duty. Why didn't you do it? You always wanted to. Didn't you? You had the strength to do it. But you were afraid. You were always afraid. Now Janice Lester takes the place of Captain Kirk
Yep ... the non-canonical novelization.
...and Starfleet certainly trusted women enough for one to be the prosecuting JAG in court-martialing Kirk.
And we saw female officers in the command gold both at helm and navigation during TOS.
cbp44189 said:Plus, you didn't see a whole bunch of other captains in TOS anyway...
I wasn't disputing canonicity.
In addition, the lady's called not only "Number One" during the episode, but "Lieutenant" at least once as well. If so, it's highly unlikely that a mere lieutenant would be permanent executive officer on a capital starship—especially when Enterprise is clearly meant to be one of Earth's best ships-of-the-line. Are we to accept that not a single commander or lieutenant commander in the entire fleet is available to hold that X-O slot?
Also, the rank insignia, such as it is, is very basic: Officers such as Pike and Number One wear one rank stripe
AFAIK, Gene's original idea was to have very little use of rank AT ALL in the show.
Notice how nobody else on the ship is ever referred to by rank (in "The Cage") except those two? Also, the rank insignia, such as it is, is very basic...
Officers such as Pike and Number One wear one rank stripe, everyone else wears none.
As for women in Starfleet: I find it absolutely impossible to believe that in Gene's picture-perfect utopia he intended to create for TOS, that he would hew to such a ridiculously sexist idea that *women couldn't be captains*. A society that eliminated poverty, war, crime, etc. would not be sexist.
pookha;1856465[quote said:And we saw female officers in the command gold both at helm and navigation during TOS.
And their rank was ... ?
This is not a question of whether women could do the job—obviously they can—but rather whether they were commanding starships in this period. I'm not endorsing the Old Boys' Club, but rather pointing out that it's quite possible it existed ... and that the evidence, when not put through an eisegetical wringer, indicates it likely to some extent did.
Other than Hernandez almost forty years after the fact [and 100 years before] commanding a pre-Federation Starfleet ship, we got nothin' until Star Trek IV. [Heck, insofar as I recall, we didn't see Number One in the center seat for even an instant during "The Cage." Instead, they put everyone around the briefing room. Interesting choice.]
We never even see a female Vulcan commanding a combat cruiser, do we? How about an Andorian ship? Xindi?
Tellarite?
Klingon?
[Crickets chirping.].
Actually we didn't see male Andorian or Tellarite captains on TOS.
So your point was?
Their rank doesn't matter as much as that gold was recognized as being on the command path like Sulu who later got his own ship.
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