Publication | Closed Access
Seeking New Civilizations: Race Normativity in the <i>Star Trek</i> Franchise
13
Citations
3
References
2007
Year
EthnicityCritical Race TheoryRacial PrejudiceEducationEthnic Group RelationRacial StudyEthnocentrismRaceContemporary RacismAfrican American StudiesCultural DiversityEthnic StudiesNew CivilizationsStar Trek FranchiseMinority StudiesNormative WhitenessRacismSocial IdentityDeep Space NineRacialization StudiesIntersectionalityMulticulturalismAnti-racismCultureHumanitiesSocial AnthropologyRace RelationSocial Diversity
As with many science fiction works, the Star Trek franchise uses allegory to address contemporary social issues. Taking a liberal humanistic stance, it addresses race and racism using aliens as allegorical stand-ins for humanity. However, the producers of the Star Trek franchise were inadvertently perpetuating the racism they were advocating against. Operating within the framework of normative Whiteness, the producers privilege the White American male as the average human being. The characters of other racial and cultural backgrounds try to assimilate into the normative Whiteness defined by the producers or they are simply in the background to support the White lead characters. By drawing on previous work on the original series and The Next Generation, this article examines episodes from Deep Space Nine, Voyager, and Enterprise to determine how the Star Trek franchise reinscribes, or sometimes destabilizes, the mode of racial and cultural homogeneity assumed by the producers.
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