Is spock gay

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Enterprise was human sexual diversity: in six television series and 12 feature films, the franchise has never identified an onscreen character as unambiguously gay, lesbian, or transgender.

Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry was, apparently, farther behind the curve on gay rights than he was on racial equality, and never quite made queer inclusion a priority in his time guiding the franchise.

Legend among fans also has it that an officer on the bridge in the movie Star Trek:First Contact, Lieutenant Hawke (Neal McDonough), was conceived with a gay backstory, but this personalizing detail was cut for time, and Hawke was assimilated by the Borg — maybe making things a little more fabulous in the depths of the Collective, if not the onscreen canon.

He was also responsible for writing a story called “The World Well Lost,” which was then far and away the most sympathetic portrayal of queer characters in sci-fi (and many a comment has been made about how the two main characters of that story resemble, in broad strokes, our Starfleet officers).

And while Sturgeon might’ve written one overtly queer work, he was also more or less the master of subtext.

“There is no pain.”

In truth, Spock was of a piece with characters I’d embraced in every cultural product I encountered as I grew up. His struggle with his sexuality ends on a decidedly optimistic note as he walks back into the Enterprise, side by side with Kirk. https://www.themarysue.com/kirk-and-spock-queer-history/ Accessed 19 Oct. 2018

Shatner, William, et al.

“I am a Vulcan,” the boy tells himself the next time those girls round the corner of the schoolhouse. Or it forces him that way. (It has since been adapted in a fan-made continuation of the Original Series, with no small success.)

But while fans looking for overt queerness in Star Trek are forced to rummage through the lower decks of the franchise, there’s been a covert gay icon stationed up on the bridge since before the first episode was broadcast.

When faced with the two impossible choices, to lose himself or to lose his identity, Spock discovers a third option. I do not need to be cured."

Related: Lower Decks Proves TNG Era Is The Best Version Of Star Trek

Soren's speech during her hearing is a powerful and poignant message about the plight of those deemed different from the rest of society, and for those in the LGBTQ+ community watching this episode of The Next Generation when it first aired in 1992, her words must have hit home in some very meaningful ways.

The sight of Spock wrestling on the floor with his partially exposed captain is not explicitly sexual, but it is the most physical display of emotions between two men the show has aired. Spock has been at his post in the back of my mind as I’ve built my own career in science, and come to understand and appreciate my own queer view of the world — he has been, and always will be, a model of the life I hope to live. ❧

This entry was posted in culture, queer, television, writing and tagged Spock, Star Trek by jby.

There are more hints about Mariner's bisexuality in Star Trek: Lower Decks season 1, as seen in the sexual tension between Mariner and Jack Ransom, and Mariner mentioning that she dated an Anabaj, who seem to be predominantly female. True to Riker's romancing skills, the two become close and begin a romantic relationship, but when they are discovered Soren is immediately put before a hearing to decide her fate, where she makes an impassioned plea for herself and people like her to be treated better by J'naii society.

I think I can safely say that he does.

Imagine, if you will, a bookish and un-athletic boy brought up in a devout household in a rural school district, watching as his classmates began to bubble with hormones and to do things that are as incomprehensible as they are objectively silly.

is spock gay

It adds an intimate air to the battle, having Kirk in such an oddly stylish state of undress. He must then choose between these two forms of love, and between loyalty to his own species and the family of humanoid friends he has adopted on Deep Space Nine. This book was published in 1979, when there was still time a-plenty for unholy hell to come down on his head were he to suggest a physical relationship between Kirk and Spock.