Daniel Bernardi
Autor von Star Trek and History: Race-ing toward a White Future
Über den Autor
Werke von Daniel Bernardi
Filming Difference: Actors, Directors, Producers, and Writers on Gender, Race, and Sexuality in Film (2009) 10 Exemplare
Narrative landmines : rumors, Islamist extremism, and the struggle for strategic influence (2012) 5 Exemplare
Getagged
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- Geschlecht
- male
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- Werke
- 12
- Mitglieder
- 110
- Beliebtheit
- #176,729
- Bewertung
- 3.1
- Rezensionen
- 1
- ISBNs
- 25
Bernardi argues that the showrunners of the original series attempted to infuse the show with a liberal-humanist framework. He concludes, “The paradox of Star Trek is that, despite or because of its liberal humanism, it supports a universe where whites are morally, politically, and innately superior, and both colored humans and colored aliens are either servants, threats, or objects of exotic desire” (pg. 68). In looking at the feature films, Bernardi primarily focuses on the starships Enterprise that appear in them. He argues, “The Enterprise is a specularized figure of a particular kind: a chronotope, or what literary theorist Mikhail Bakhtin, loosely borrowing from Albert Einstein’s special theory of relativity, recognizes as the ‘intrinsic connectedness’ of space and time” (pg. 72). As a white, feminized object, the Enterprise offers the opportunity for gender and race analysis, particularly in contrast with alien ships. Of The Next Generation, Bernardi argues that the late 1980s and early 1990s’ dominant “discourses make up a neoconservative montage, particularly a future-time that capitulates to multiculturalism while continuing with Trek’s tradition of securing – perpetuating and naturalizing – the superiority of whiteness” (pg. 112). Further, he argues, “The science fiction spinoff capitulates to a utopian future where ‘race’ is determined by biology, miscegenation is still a taboo, and difference is either whitewashed or exaggerated and punished” (pg. 117). Bernardi argues of the fandom, “Trekkers often engage in heated debates about the racial politics of everything from casting to the representations of alien civilizations. In such instances, historicity is not weakened, but elaborated upon, contextualized – made meaningful – in the everyday lives of real people” (pg. 143). This process demonstrates how those who consume culture shape its meanings just as much as those who produce it. Bernardi concludes, “If…we see whiteness as a sociocultural formation, a historical system of meaning production, that works to privilege some of us as the expense of Others – that steers the racial formation – then we have a chance to challenge its intense veracity and dogged versatility” (pg. 181).… (mehr)