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Enterprise Zones Kent Ono

Enterprise Zones By Kent Ono

Enterprise Zones by Kent Ono


$10.00
Condition - Very Good
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Summary

A cultural-studies analysis of Star Trek and Star Trek: The Next Generation. The 13 essays address the topics of hegemony, utopias, militarism, colonialism, gender, violence, race, class, sexuality and liminality by analyzing sometimes individual episodes, and sometimes overarching themes.

Enterprise Zones Summary

Enterprise Zones: Critical Positions by Kent Ono

Can you imagine a world without Star Trek without warp drive, phasers, photon torpedoes, tricorders, communicators, and transporters? After six Hollywood movies and twenty-five years of nonstop television presence, Star Trek is, indeed, a pervasive cultural phenomenon! This is the first critical, scholarly look at the mysteries, hidden meanings, and complex issues of the text known as Star Trek. Looking at the original Spock-Kirk Star Trek, the contributors ask and answer questions such as: What are the cultural conditions surrounding the homoerotic relationship between Kirk and Spock? How does the show depict gender relations while simultaneously recreating the cultural conditions under which women continue to experience sexual aggression and violence? They also explore Star Trek: The Next Generation, raising issues such as: Was Data a battlefield on which the struggle for human rights was waged? Did militarism and warring versions of masculinity intersect at Worf?Readers will discover the unique charges of cultural studies scholarship and how it enables us to designate a powerful pop-cultural phenomenon such as Star Trek into a legitimate site of study. The thirteen essayists address the very real and necessary topics of hegemony, utopias, militarism, colonialism, gender, violence, race, class, sexuality, and liminality, analyzing individual episodes and overarching themes of Star Trek and Star Trek: The Next Generation. Their insights on how Star Trek affects what we understand our culture to be, how it represents the social and political order, and how it reproduces pleasure and pain in its televisual texts, will fascinate scholars, students, and Trekkers alike. }Can you imagine a world without Star Trek without warp drive, phasers, photon torpedoes, tricorders, communicators, and transporters? After six Hollywood movies and twenty-five years of nonstop television presence, Star Trek is, indeed, a pervasive cultural phenomenon! This is the first critical, scholarly look at the mysteries, hidden meanings, and complex issues of the text known as Star Trek. Looking at the original Spock-Kirk Star Trek, the contributors ask and answer questions such as: What are the cultural conditions surrounding the homoerotic relationship between Kirk and Spock? How does the show depict gender relations while simultaneously recreating the cultural conditions under which women continue to experience sexual aggression and violence? They also explore Star Trek: The Next Generation, raising issues such as: Was Data a battlefield on which the struggle for human rights was waged? Did militarism and warring versions of masculinity intersect at Worf?Readers will discover the unique charges of cultural studies scholarship and how it enables us to designate a powerful pop-cultural phenomenon such as Star Trek into a legitimate site of study. The thirteen essayists address the very real and necessary topics of hegemony, utopias, militarism, colonialism, gender, violence, race, class, sexuality, and liminality, analyzing individual episodes and overarching themes of Star Trek and Star Trek: The Next Generation. Their insights on how Star Trek affects what we understand our culture to be, how it represents the social and political order, and how it reproduces pleasure and pain in its televisual texts, will fascinate scholars, students, and Trekkers alike. }

Table of Contents

Introduction; Centering Subjectivities; A Part of Myself No Man Should Ever See: Reading Captain Kirks Multiple Masculinities; (Elyce Rae Helford. ); When the Body Speaks: Deanna Trois Tenuous Authority and the Rationalization of Federation Superiority in Star Trek: The Next Generation Rape Narratives; (Sarah Projansky. ); Liminality: Worf as Metonymic Signifier of Racial, Cultural, and National Differences; (Leah R. Vande Berg. ); Dating Data: Miscegenation in Star Trek: The Next Generation; (Rhonda V. Wilcox. ); Manufacturing Hegemonies; Cyborgs in Utopia: The Problem of Radical Difference in Star Trek: The Next Generation; (Katrina G. Boyd. ); A Fabricated Space: Assimilating the Individual on; Star Trek: The Next Generation; (Amelie Hastie. ); For the Greater Good: Trilateralism and Hegemony in Star Trek: The Next Generation; (Steven F. Collins. ); Domesticating Terrorism: A Neocolonial Economy of Diffrance; (Kent A. Ono. ); Producing Pleasures; Boys in Space: Star Trek, Latency, and the Neverending Story; (Ilsa J. Bick. ); Enjoyment (in) Between Fathers: General Chang as Homoerotic Enablement in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country; (Evan Haffner. ); All Good Things: The End of Star Trek: The Next Generation, The End of CamelotThe End of the Tale about Woman as Handmaiden to Patriarchy as Superman; (Marleen S. Barr. ); Weaving the Cyborg Shroud: Mourning and Deferral in Star Trek: The Next Generation; (Taylor Harrison. ); Appendix A: Interview with Henry Jenkins Appendix B: A Selective Bibliography of Critical Writing on Star Trek

Additional information

GOR002252977
9780813328997
0813328993
Enterprise Zones: Critical Positions by Kent Ono
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Taylor & Francis Inc
19960808
320
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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