Difference between revisions of "Star Trek: Discovery"

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Season 1, Episode 1, "The Vulcan Hello," 24 Sept. 2017
 
Season 1, Episode 1, "The Vulcan Hello," 24 Sept. 2017
 
  Generally significant for introducing a tension between interpretations of intentions and actions in terms of the agents' culture or race/species — and gender, with the Klingon forces gendered male, the Federation's more female (though gender-balanced in ways complicated nicely by species). Of interest here for the mise en scène: Star-Trekian smooth and Modern(ist) vs. Klingon complex and convoluted, with Klingon spaces and costuming suggesting the Baroque plus indigenous MesoAmerican-Imperial. Note also the juxtaposing of an ornate, heavy-metal Klingon casket and the burial at space of a male-gendered leader with the female lead on the Federation side on a high-tech gurney in a curative space in sickbay; and cf. and contrast ''that'' with a child-version of the character in a Vulcan learning-chamber, quizzed by a computer.
 
  Generally significant for introducing a tension between interpretations of intentions and actions in terms of the agents' culture or race/species — and gender, with the Klingon forces gendered male, the Federation's more female (though gender-balanced in ways complicated nicely by species). Of interest here for the mise en scène: Star-Trekian smooth and Modern(ist) vs. Klingon complex and convoluted, with Klingon spaces and costuming suggesting the Baroque plus indigenous MesoAmerican-Imperial. Note also the juxtaposing of an ornate, heavy-metal Klingon casket and the burial at space of a male-gendered leader with the female lead on the Federation side on a high-tech gurney in a curative space in sickbay; and cf. and contrast ''that'' with a child-version of the character in a Vulcan learning-chamber, quizzed by a computer.
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Season 1, Episode 2, "Battle at the Binary Star,"
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Note dialog between imprisoned protagonist, Michael Burnham, and the ship's computer, both gendered female; subject: ethical grounds for the computer to release Burnham to go through the vacuum in a wrecked part of the ship to go to a bulkhead hatch the computer will blow open. Cf. and contrast dialogs between David Bowman and HAL-9000 over entry into the ''Discovery'' in [[2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY (film)]] and and the dialog with the computerized bomb — both speakers gendered male — in [[DARK STAR]].
  
 
Season 2, Episode 9, "Project Daedalus," 14 March 2019
 
Season 2, Episode 9, "Project Daedalus," 14 March 2019

Revision as of 18:03, 19 March 2023

WORKING


Star Trek: Discovery (TV series). Bryan Fuller and Alex Kurtzman, creators. Based on Star Trek by Gene Roddenberry, #7 in the Star Trek series of series. USA (and Canada): Secret Hideout, Roddenberry Entertainment, Living Dead Guy Productions, CBS Studios (Production) / CBS, CBS All Access, Paramount+ (networks), 2017 f., 4 seasons as of March 2023; one more season announced.[1] Running time: 37-65 minutes.[2]

Premise (Wikipedia) <block quote> The series begins around ten years before the events of Star Trek: The Original Series, when Commander Michael Burnham's actions start a war between the United Federation of Planets and the Klingon Empire. She is court-martialed, stripped of rank, and reassigned to the USS Discovery, which has a unique means of propulsion called the "Spore Drive". After an adventure in the Mirror Universe, Discovery helps end the Klingon war. In the second season they investigate seven mysterious signals and a strange figure known as the "Red Angel", and fight off a rogue artificial intelligence. This conflict ends with the Discovery traveling to the 32nd century, more than 900 years into their future.[3]

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Some Episodes of Interest for Users of this Wiki

Season 1, Episode 1, "The Vulcan Hello," 24 Sept. 2017

Generally significant for introducing a tension between interpretations of intentions and actions in terms of the agents' culture or race/species — and gender, with the Klingon forces gendered male, the Federation's more female (though gender-balanced in ways complicated nicely by species). Of interest here for the mise en scène: Star-Trekian smooth and Modern(ist) vs. Klingon complex and convoluted, with Klingon spaces and costuming suggesting the Baroque plus indigenous MesoAmerican-Imperial. Note also the juxtaposing of an ornate, heavy-metal Klingon casket and the burial at space of a male-gendered leader with the female lead on the Federation side on a high-tech gurney in a curative space in sickbay; and cf. and contrast that with a child-version of the character in a Vulcan learning-chamber, quizzed by a computer.

Season 1, Episode 2, "Battle at the Binary Star,"

Note dialog between imprisoned protagonist, Michael Burnham, and the ship's computer, both gendered female; subject: ethical grounds for the computer to release Burnham to go through the vacuum in a wrecked part of the ship to go to a bulkhead hatch the computer will blow open. Cf. and contrast dialogs between David Bowman and HAL-9000 over entry into the Discovery in 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY (film) and and the dialog with the computerized bomb — both speakers gendered male — in DARK STAR. 

Season 2, Episode 9, "Project Daedalus," 14 March 2019

See for "Starfleet's Control artificial intelligence" and Control in a take-over attempt,[4] atypical for Federation AI, though reversed in the third season (see below).[5]



RDE, finishing, 18Mar23 f.