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Here's the thing: I dislike Discovery. I tried, it's not for me. I dislike the (for me) over-emotional acting.
But I have a hard time believe people who complain about Trek being woke are actually trekkies.
Because they never seem to get upset about far more woke episodes of TOS, TNG or SNW.
Same here, and that's why I singled out out bad faith actors in my post. They aren't real fans of Trek any more than people who like to highlight black crime statistics in the U.S. are "just asking questions." It's bullshit, and they need to be called out on that bullshit. Star Trek has always had a progressive vision of the future; anyone who claims otherwise or complains about "wokeness" is sowing discord and trying to get people to subscribe to their brand of douchebaggery.
Never underestimate the ability of conservatives to ignore political messages that aren't explicitly stated. Even something as in-your-face as TNG's The Outcast is easily viewed by conservatives as "a funny alien story", and not a metaphor for real-world political issues.
Seriously. They have enough trouble accepting people with different gender identities now. Thirty years ago? Even the concept of “gender identity” was enough to make their heads explode.
Amusingly, even the creators of The Outcast didn't realise they were making an episode about gender identity. They saw it as an episode about sexuality, and about providing representation to gay people. Which isn't an incorrect reading, obviously, but I think most people would agree that interpreting it as a trans allegory is a much stronger reading.
I don’t now, nor did I then see it as a representation or allegory for gay people… although… I suppose someone who knew little-to-nothing of trans (or gay) people might mistake it as such— and in 1992, a lot of people probably made this mistake. So, I can see this being the case back then.
But I have trouble believing the writers didn’t know what they were doing, as they seems to capture Soren’s struggle in a pretty heartfelt and accurate way. I think the only character whose sexuality may have been considered in that episode was Riker’s, as it immediately and unequivocally established him as pansexual without even mentioning it. And that’s how you do it. Just like Jadzei Dax’s bisexuality. Or Garak’s. It was a footnote at most. We only learned about either/both through incidental actions, not because it was either announced or made a spectacle of, and neither of those characters were ever defined by it.
Edit: For me, though, at the age of 13, this episode was my introduction to the concept of transgenderism. And, for that matter, the concept of being non-binary. And both were explained in very clear and simple terms, and in accepting, non-judgemental ways. And I’m so grateful that Trek thought me these lessons first before others tried to teach me another message later. For I knew that they were wrong because what Trek taught me was something different: love and understanding and empathy and compassion and acceptance— for without those things, people get hurt. People suffer. People die.
People like me.
The key to the gay allegory is to take a much less literal look at it. It's about representation of a person who is ostracised for reasons related to the broad category of "sex and gender expression". It is a metaphor, after all, so there's nothing wrong with being less literal about it.
Speaking of Riker, Jonathan Frakes wanted Soren to be played by a man, to make the message stronger to the contemporary audience. I think the studio chickened out?
Oh, regarding what the episode was supposed to be, IIRC, it was supposed to be a straight-up story about a gay male alien escaping an oppressive society that Riker hooks up with. Like, there wasn’t any metaphor or allegory beyond gay oppression in contemporaneous society, it was just that. And, of course, Rick Berman, an inveterate prick and widely-known homophobe absolutely shut that shit down. It got rewritten repeatedly into what it became, and, yes, Frakes still wanted Soren’s character to be played by a male, but Berman adamantly refused due to his own bigotries. Sure, Paramount may have gotten cold feet about it anyway, maybe not, but it never got that far.
Eventually, it got to the form we finally saw on screen, but, in retrospect, it’s a much stronger piece for it, and, at least in my eyes, the story is quite straightforward. It’s very plainly a trans character in an enby society which forbids gender expression of any kind, and that’s the source of the conflict. Additionally, there’s the allegorical references to the lgbtq+ community as a whole and otherism generally, but neither of those concepts are directly the subject.
Of course, people are going to read a lot more into it as they personally identify with it, and I’m not in any position to criticize or judge that. I’m just giving my own interpretation.
The meaning of woke changed. That is to say, TNG isn't woke in the same way STD tries to be.
TNG is about self reflection, self improvement, professionalism, materialism, humanism, striving every day to make tomorrow better than yesterday.
STD is about emotions, entitlement... And honestly I struggle to find what the show actually says. There's a focus on CGI spectacle. But since STD contains a black woman as captain, a gay couple, and a non binary individual, criticism of its lack of depth isn't allowed.
We see the writers pat themselves on the back for things Star Trek has already done in the past, just to give themselves social brownie points, and if you don't like it you're a sexist bigot. That is what woke means today. It's not true progressivism.