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#i love making clone characters trans allegories
im-smart-i-swear · 7 months
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i always assumed he cut his hair with a pair of shitty scissors in front of his bathroom mirror at like 2am
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Have you seen this childhood show: Time Warp Trio (2005-2006), Canada and United States (English (and also a Hebrew dub and various subs)
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Commentary/Context/Memories: I loved Time Warp Trio, my library had a few DVDs of this that I watched every once in a while, it was so much fun. I remember I really liked the art + animation style.
[Mod A: When I first saw the title page, I thought that there was some kind of time-travel mishap (because they travelled or changed too much) that lead to the creation of a clone/girlsona version of the main characters or that it was a trans allegory like the Matrix. Turns out they are their great granddaughters from the year 2105 (must be strong genetics that make them look very similar (AND with similar names!) ig haha). Besides that initial confusion, I always love media that have kids going back in time to learn about historical events. Never read this book series, but I loved the Magic Tree House books growing up! That was also about time-travelling to historical events; I wish there was a Magic Tree House show (UPDATE: there’s a MTH show coming out on Netflix in 2023, but there’s only one article about it so hopefully it’s still happening <3)
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tamsythepansy · 6 years
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VOY: “Workforce”, the transest Star Trek episode ever
So. There’s a two-part episode of Star Trek: Voyager (“Workforce”) in which the crew all find themselves living out new lives as vaguely Fordist industrial workers on a planet called Quarra, all memory of their real lives having been artificially suppressed.
Imagine my surprise when, rewatching it years later, the bogus diagnosis they’re given as their memories start to resurface is...
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...which also happens to be exactly what my partners have been reminding me for the last two months (bless them). I giggled.
Lo and behold, it happens to Tuvok as well:
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Now, I get that it was the turn of the millennium and this hadn’t really entered the lexicon yet, but... this is just the tip of the iceberg. Watch along with me and see how it all plays out:
Tuvok, of course, is the first to experience memories of his real life breaking through the facade, has a panic attack, and is hospitalized:
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Well, if this isn’t relatable to multitudes of trans and non-binary Star Trek fans, I don’t know what is. 🤷🏻‍♀️
Of course, the ‘treatment’ for Dysphoria Syndrome involves suppressing the offending memory engrams, so the patient can peacefully return to being a cog in the cisheteronormative machine Quarran power distribution facility (read what you will into that). As the expert on Dysphoria Syndrome himself later puts it:
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Sounds like an allegory for LGBTQ conversion therapy to me, I mean, what?
Anyway, Seven realizes that Tuvok might be on to something, and heads to the mental health clinic to get a gender assessment investigate:
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Stepping into the realm of the purely serious for a moment, I *have* sort of read Seven’s character arc as a plausible trans allegory, and it’s pretty compelling: having her true identity suppressed at an early age, and finally being forced to confront it in adulthood; processing layers upon layers of trauma just to function as an individual; being rehabilitated by a circle of strong, compassionate women, each with their own identity issues (plus the medical wizardry, overeager cisheteronormative life coaching, and starry-eyed / vaguely inappropriate crushing of The Doctor, I guess, so yeah); struggling to reclaim her human (/feminine) sense of self even while the effects of her Borg (/patriarchal) upbringing have thoroughly warped her thoughts (even as they continue to give her superhuman resilience and insight). I’m sure there’s even a comparison to be drawn to transfeminine desirability politics — Seven is continually presented both as an extremely conventionally attractive human *and* as a mysterious cyborg whose embodiment and manner communicates an often-threatening sense of Otherness — but I’ll leave that for a future discourse. I’m honestly spitballing a bit with all of this, but to see it so explicitly referenced, intentionally or not, is quite something.
So, Seven asks the obvious question, and it turns out that, while being trans is undoubtedly a Real Thing, the specifics are... inconclusive:
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Let’s take a moment to celebrate the fact that we’re finally starting to see gender doctors who actually understand us in all our nuance, because...
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...we already know this is bad news. (Paging Dr. Harry Benjamin.)
Anyway, the compassionate gender doctor goes to the conversion therapy doctor to see what’s up, because clearly something over at the power plant is turning people trans:
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One important takeaway from this story is “never walk away and leave your work computer unlocked”:
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I get it, though! On a planet ostensibly without Tumblr or OKCupid, trans community is just really, really hard to find. 🤷🏻‍♀️
The compassionate gender doctor soon notices a pattern:
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...mm hmm, it all started when a genderqueer person sneezed in the employee locker room, and somehow the conversion therapy doctor wound up with his hands full as everybody in the office came down with a bad case of The Trans.
Finally, the compassionate gender doctor is determined to be just a little bit too sympathetic to these gender deviants, and the now-canonically trans but still awesome at passing Seven of Nine comes to the rescue:
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As if this weren’t trans enough...
...check out the subplot featuring Jaffen, a co-worker with whom Captain Janeway has an adorable but bittersweet whirlwind relationship. Though Jaffen presents as male and uses he/him pronouns, THIS TOTALLY HAPPENS, and its implications are never made clear:
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Though this is set up as the punchline of a “your father” joke, Jaffen isn’t just fucking around here. Tuvok knows what’s up, and proceeds to Vulcan-splain the joke right back to him:
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Which begs the question, how do Norvalians procreate, anyway? Are they clones, like the Vorta? Do they deposit their genetic material into pods, like the J’naii? Do they pick up ready-made offspring, like the Kobali? Whatever the intent is, it has serious implications for whatever kind of relationship he and Janeway would have (like, it’s not on the cisheteronormative trajectory of sex and babies, at the very least). So, bear with me for a moment, because this is my honest-to-goodness fan theory: 
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(okay, I admit I just had that image lying around, and this seemed like as good a moment as any to use it.)
What if Norvalians reproduce parthenogenetically, leaving the entire need for a biological “father” out of the equation?
This could mean one of two things: as with terrestrial Komodo dragons (I think), parthenogenesis happens but binary sexual reproduction is still an option (which honestly doesn’t seem like the most likely explanation, given the way Jaffen and Tuvok both frame it), *or*, as with terrestrial whiptail lizards, parthenogenesis is the default, and male (i.e., sperm-producing) offspring are extremely rare and/or usually infertile.
So yeah, okay, they reproduce parthenogenetically, Jaffen is a rare male and is probably infertile, and therefore the Jaffen/Janeway relationship is more about companionship and cooperation than sex and babies. I’m fine with that, and I actually find it quite heartwarming.
But, with that in mind, do we need to assume that Jaffen is male, whatever that means for his species? After all, whiptail lizards engage in female/female courtship behaviour, which somehow makes them more fecund — and remember, it’s the Delta Quadrant; we’ve seen enough weird sex shit by Season 7 (cf. “Elogium”, “Favorite Son”, “The Disease”, “Ashes to Ashes”, off the top of my head) that we can reasonably conclude that all bets are off. 
My interpretation? Jaffen is an honest, gallant, leather-waistcoat-rocking, he/him pronoun-using, parthenogenetic Space Butch. Maybe I’ve spent too much time on Sapphic Star Trek Tumblr, or have finally disappeared up my own genderqueer ass, but I’m convinced it’s the simplest explanation that’s congruent with the facts.
[I just spent a bunch of time trying to find the “Captain Janeway is a closet lesbian, change my mind” meme, but no dice.]
Anyway, if you’ve made it this far, it’s time for me to deliver on the non-binary trans lesbian Star Trek shitposting that I’m usually all about. Having been closeted for a long time, I know a thing or two about relationships that seem straight on the surface but are actually hella queer under the hood, so to speak. Just look at these two u-hauling it on the third date (it’s adorable!):
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This also seems really gay for some reason:
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And, at the end of the day, he’s a good ally:
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Watch the whole episode for the obligatory Sad Lesbian Ending.
The icing on this three-tiered Tholian gay wedding cake
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...yup.
[Thanks to Em for subtly egging me on (ha) and Bry for putting up with me procrastinating all night. Love you both.]
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