I haven't checked the Voyager Skip It/Watch It guides I did for
lizlet in a while, and I found a comment in my
Season 5 Guide that I started to answer ... and then it got way out of hand. So, uh, I brought it over here, and I'll make a link over there when I'm done.
These criteria are so odd. The reasons for throwing in forced romances may be subject,
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I don't want to say 'I wish Seven had been male', because, no, I don't wish she'd been male; she was fantastic in a lot of ways mainstream science fiction doesn't often give women a chance to be. But if dude_Seven had been there instead, we viewers would have been spared so much of the gross that surrounded Seven. And that's a shitty tradeoff!
Star Trek is obviously capable of creating female characters without sexualizing them to the gills, and has done so even on Voyager itself. (T'Pol's presence is pretty unforgivable on a number of levels, not least because of how few other women ever appeared on Enterprise -- at least until I stopped watching.) Even Troi's catsuits were kind of stupid and unprofessional-looking, but she knew she was a pretty lady and often put her pretty lady skills to use on boys she liked (like Worf!). Hell, you can even specifically put a sexy lady in a sexy silver catsuit -- see: Mirror Kira -- and keep her totally in charge of her own body and presentation. But when the high sexiness of a character is inversely proportionate to their own control and design over it, you're on your way to make a RealDoll.
Not to summon Candlejack here, but I think Voyager and Enterprise are victims of the same horror that's lead to GamerGate: the idea that creating a space that men will visit at all necessitates creating a space that only men will visit, because stinky girls ruin everything. (If girls want to show up, that's fine, but they need to behave like 'neutral' consumers; i.e., men.) And just to show men how welcome they are, we're going to put in characters that are very clearly coded as fetish objects -- not just sexy humans, but fetish objects. And then instead of having them categorically reject that fetish object status (which I've seen happen, like in Xenosaga), they get played right into the same nerd romance wish fulfilment plots.
I also don't want to find myself in the place where I'm saying, it's wrong to find Seven sexy! Because it's not! I mean, it's what she's designed to be, so if that's what you think she is, well, that design is working. But the fact that she's given all the sexuality and none of the agency around it creeps me the hell out, and seeing other male characters heroically try to use that sexuality to their own ends makes me want to crawl right out of my skin.
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And I definitely don't wish Seven had been a dude, I guess the comparison to how guys in similar situations in the same series were treated just makes me mad. And/or makes me think how cool it would've been if she'd been allowed to do some of the same things they did.
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