Star Trek is liberal bourgeois to the bone.
Show me more of this Earth thing called "shopping"  
The  Federation is supposedly post-capitalist, post-money, etc., yet it has  many of the important hallmarks of advanced capitalist   social  organisation. A highly organised and stratified division of labour, a deep separation between workplace and home life, work shifts, career promotion, private nuclear families, a socially-separate education system providing training and qualifications, a professional liberal media, massive military expenditure (of resources if not money), hierarchical political and military arrangements combined with liberal ideology, a    separate political class, etc.  In one of the films, someone even mentions "opinion polls".  So, the Federation clearly has what looks like a capitalist state, capitalist superstructure and capitalist social arrangements.  What of the economy?  Well, they still have    privately owned and run restaurants, for example, though supposedly people run them for the love of it… and in DS9,    the Federation people mesh perfectly into the economy of Bajor, with its Ferengi    businessmen, etc… to the point where you have Federation officers    trading goods and paying credits for booze. When they want to make a    ‘darker’, grungier version of their utopia,  they take characters from    the utopia and cast them amongst the  money-using barbarians on the    frontiers.  But the Utopians have little difficulty dealing with the money-users in a natural way, whatever their occasional disdain.  The facile nature of the  pretence that the Federation is    post-capitalist is revealed by the  ease with which the Federation types    merge into Quark’s bar.  
Meanwhile, capitalism is  turned into a   kind of quaint pathology,  espoused as a blatant and impudent ethic  of acquisition, by a race that it’d be easy to   mistake for a bunch of   submerged Jewish stereotypes (even down to   ballbusting mothers).  The   utter misunderstanding of capitalism –   indeed, of all human history –   is best expressed in the scene where   Quark, tired of being endlessly   patronized and insulted by the   holier-than-thou humans, compares his   culture with the culture of Earth,   pointing out that Ferengos (or   whatever the silly place is called) has no   history of things like   concentration camps.  The implication is that humans must blame their   own species-nature for the horrors of the 20th century... which fails to  notice the role of competing capitalist imperialisms and fascist reaction (against socialist challenges to capitalism) in creating the wars that lead to concentration camps.   Capitalism  itself is absolved, since it has been practiced by the  Ferengi and lead  to no comparable horrors, merely social eccentricities.  Even the  sexism of Ferengi culture is seen as a mere cultural  malformation, with DS9  repeatedly showing female Ferengis achieving  liberation through their  equal ability to participate in ruthless trade,  etc., whenever they manage to trick or force the men into giving them a chance.  Capitalism is thus so entirely acquitted  of any  involvement in patriarchy that it is instead offered as a way of   defeating it.  This is entirely consonant with the heavily peddled   ideas that free markets will eventually result in populations of free   individuals, that the liberty of trade is the liberty of people,  that  liberalisation of market economies brings liberalisation of  societies,  that personal self-promotion is the best way to overcome  cultural  disadvantages.  
This inherent strain of bourgeois liberal ideology running through Trek  is  the secret inner reason why consumption and exchange on the   bourgeois  economic model still work in a technological culture that can   produce  via things like replicators.  The writers are forced to  imagine  that,  in a few hundred years time, it’ll be possible to create   technology  that makes production as we know it obsolete… yet they are   unable to  imagine a genuine post-capitalist world.  They are so aware  of  the  contradiction that they have to hide all the money and make  all the   characters claim it no longer exists.  The result is that the  Federation seems like a collection of people in denial.  One senses the  money, the inequalities, the trade, the wage-slips, all off to one side,  off camera.
The liberal writers of 90s Trek were able to dream of a Utopian liberal paradise yet unable to conceive of its nuts 'n' bolts functioning without bringing in overtones of capitalism.  
The Berman Ideology
The hero/protagonist characters behave  like the ideal of how people should behave, conceptualised within an  entirely bourgeois framework.  Hard work, dedication to career,  specialisation and professionalism, separation of private time from  work, love of the private nuclear family, considered obedience to the  state, respect for private property, self-advancement, enlightened  self-interest, etc.  And, when the crunch comes, the individual hero/captain conquers the baddies or embodies the moral lesson.  Trek is liberal  bourgeois, of course, hence the emphasis on culturally progressive  virtues like tolerance for other lifestyles, equality of opportunity for  women and minorities, lack of racial prejudice, lack of emphasis on  nationalism, a questioning attitude to authority (within circumscribed  limits, i.e. following orders, the rule of law, duty) and so on.
Of  course, whatever radical edge this may once have had in the 60s  (female, Russian, black, Japanese officers... all treated as almost-equals by  their white, male superiors - imagine!), has now almost entirely dissipated.   Profession of cultural liberalism (in most areas) is now considered  baseline normal in the media and political cultures in almost all  Western democracies, with only fringe hard-conservatisms challenging the  (admittedly largely specious) dedication to women's rights, equality  and tolerance.  These days, even the spittle-flecked denouncers of gay  marriage have to either pretend it isn't an issue of discrimination or, in  the US, invoke a supposedly disinterested obedience to Biblical  literalism, framing their hatred as part of a struggle for the civil rights of Christian bigots, for their freedom to discriminate.
Indeed, in the discourse of modern Western  capitalist democracies, such liberal tolerance is equated directly  (implicitly or explicitly) with the supposedly liberating qualities of  trade and commerce and capital flow.  Capitalism is the bedrock of  prosperous modernity, in this view.  This is why culturalist liberalism  is so obsessed, these days, with comparing modern, secular, liberal,  tolerant Western democracy (i.e. "civilisation") to the putatively  backward, medieval, intolerant, sexist, homophobic horror of Islam and  the Arab countries.  90s Trek rejected the hardline version of this  (i.e. the version that would find its ultimate expression in Hitchens, et al) but, nevertheless, it isn't hard to see this  worldview embedded within the depiction of many of the alien races that  attacked Picard, Sisko and Janeway.  
In this way, Trek  - especially 90s Trek - expresses a deep ambivalence towards capitalism in 20th century  liberalism; an ambivalence that - as an integral part of liberalism - is itself entirely bourgeois.  On the one hand, it'd be nice to do away with money and all  the grubby business that goes with it... and, of course, the past contains much evidence of distressing things like discrimination (it's always in the past)...  On the other hand, capitalism  is - so the thinking runs - obviously the best (or, in the soft version, the least bad) economic system that we,  as a species, can devise.
In Trek, the Utopian strain in liberalism (and I'm not the sort of person who axiomatically uses the word 'utopian' as an insult) is represented by the attempt to portray a post-capitalist future in which people co-operate socially and strive for betterment without material gain as an incentive.  The deeply ingrained strain of reactionary pessimism in liberalism is unable to imagine any such future, so Trek simply presents an idealised version of our own bourgeois epoch but with the money edited out of the picture.  Also, Capitalism the Deliverer must be absolved of its crimes by 'facing up to' the cultural defects of the past (sexism, racism, etc.) so that we may choose to leave them behind as we sail onwards to the happy free-market millennium.  What Fukuyama called 'the End of History'.  In Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, which topically retold the just-happened fall of communism with Klingons standing in for Russians, Kirk is given a line which repudiates this 'end of history', yet the world he lives in has, by this point, become a doggerel realisation of Fukuyama's vision.
So, the utopia is of a recognisably bourgeois nature.  It might postulate the end of war, poverty and discrimination as baseline requirements (impossible under capitalism, which relentlessly and systemically generates all these blights)... but it also draws its conception of the highest achievements possible for humanity from bourgeois ideas.  Discovery, exploration and migration are inextricably bound to self-advancement, self-realisation, status, achievement, the respect of intellectual superiors and the loyalty of lower ranks.
Meanwhile, the bourgeois mindset  of  the programme shows us meritocracy,  representative democracy, social   mobility – all those things that are  supposed to be inherent boons of   capitalism – functioning pretty much  perfectly, almost all the time.   Poverty, nationalist xenophobia, racism, sexism, depression, addiction,  alienation, rape, domestic violence - all of which are widespread blights upon advanced  capitalist cultures in the real world - are things of the past in  Trekworld.
In the Roddenberry/Berman joyous future, humanity has supposedly left such things behind, apparently as an act of pure will (remind me why its always us Marxists who are accused of having unrealistic expectations of human nature?).  Those  judgemental enough to accuse humans of having changed very little - like  Q, for instance - are roundly defeated in debate by Picard and his band  of enlightened, bourgeois, democratic, humanitarian militarists.
When,  occasionally, the Federation utopia wobbles in its high-minded devotion  to ethical, legal, beneficent expansion, along comes  Kirk/Picard/Whoever to the rescue.  Thus Trek fulfills another duty of bourgeois ideology: the idolizing of individual heroism.
I, Captain
The Federation is thoroughly individualistic: that’s  why the ultimate  horror is when Picard gets made into a drone.  And  Trek’s   championing  of individualism is why Picard’s assimilation  ultimately   leads to the  Federation victory.  Yes, the rest of the main   characters  help… but  they’re all, like Picard, individualists who have   achieved  their  authority status through self-advancement within a   meritocratic   hierarchical command structure.  Data is on a quest for personhood through success in his career.  Worf seeks personal honour through success in his career.  Riker seeks success in his career through... well, through success in his career.  
The  episode where   Picard gets assimilated even features a conflict   between Riker and a   thrusting, ambitious young, up-and-coming  Starfleet  hotshot who wants   his job.  We’re allowed to be appalled by  her outright  ruthlessness   about trying to cut-in in front of him…  yet they end the  story as the   best of friends, with her ultimately  judged as an  excellent, effective   officer who’s just been a bit  overly-attitudey.  Liberal bourgeois ideology has rarely been so  perfectly expressed in sci-fi form.
There are different kinds of individualism.  There’s MacMurphy in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest –    irrepressibly himself, resisting authority and control and repression    at every stage because he can’t help himself.  The little guy,  battling   the Big Nurse and the Combine.  There's Yossarian in Catch-22.  Such individualists in American fiction, whatever their context in the radical anti-establishment scepticism of the 60s and early 70s, probably trace their lineage back to Ralph Waldo Emerson, who claimed that “society everywhere is in conspiracy against the manhood of every one of its members”.  
There’s also the Captain.  Kirk and Picard are classic bourgeois hero figures, though of different types.  
Picard  is the liberal bourgeois establishment hero, par excellence.    He  nestles in a bed of prestigious cultural capital (classical music,  Shakespeare,   etc.), is both aristocratic AND a product of meritocratic    self-advancement.  The people he respects are the people who work  within   the system and submit themselves to it, yet he retains his    individuality by his eccentricities and private interests.  He saves the    day via his personal intellect and bravery, even combating his own    establishment structure when it errs in its commitment to individualism or to liberal values    (assumed in Trek to usually be the basis of law).
Kirk   has something of MacMurphy about him… they’re both lustful,  self-gratifying, unscrupulous men of appetite.  Kirk is often said to have a rebellious streak, a tendency to disobey orders and buck authority... though this is more talked about than actually seen.  But Kirk's disobedience can also be seen as evidence of his individualism.  He has more than a touch of Emersonian 'Self Reliance'.  He's the libertarian who refuses to be bound by the pronouncements of the state when he knows what's right and what he has to do.  He is like the   rugged  frontiersman of American folk myth, albeit seasoned with  democratic sentiments (the retrospective liberal justification).  He's the 'rough diamond'  who  leads the wagon  train and carves civilization into the face of the   wilderness.   Whereas MacMurphy (more of a 60s radical) is explicitly shown to ally himself   with the Chief  (the silent Indian patient who narrates the novel), Kirk (a 60s authority figure seasoned with a rebellious streak) has to fight  and tame the barbarians.
One Person's 'Frontier' (Final or Not) is Another Person's Home
Both  Kirk and Picard confront various orientalist stereotypes, re-imagined as  aliens, who block the slow and peaceful advance of liberal civilization into the empty wilderness where no man has gone before (though there are plenty of people living there, they just don't count since they're not 'men')... but Kirk's bunch are more straightforwardly swarthy and cruel  and decadent and inscrutable and villainous.  Picard encounters the  Klingons as noble savages with whom a civilised man can negotiate,  whereas for Kirk they were generally just Machiavellian baddies of a kind so generic that they could be commies one week, Arabs the next.
By the way... it's astounding that apparently intelligent people can tout Star Trek as  a great example of progressivism in popular culture, given just how  many racial stereotypes the various captains meet out there in space.   Yes, Kirk kissed Uhura (well, they turned their faces to one side as though  they were kissing, in case the sight of a white man's lips actually  touching those of a black woman caused a wave of suicides and heart  attacks amongst the viewing public) but Uhura was only allowed to be  black woman because she was, essentially, manning the switchboard.  (One  might wonder in passing what would've happened to a script which called  for a white woman to kiss a black man.)
Inalienable Rights
The  problem with all these rugged individualists is that they tie in to one    of the most persistent ideological notions of capitalist society:  that   the individual subject is the locus of human life.  The  individual   strives and fights and wins… or goes under.  That’s the  professed   morality of business because it expresses the ruthless  competition of   the market, and it finds its way into every corner of  social life under capitalism.  Even liberal tolerance has been co-opted  by neoliberalism via libertarianism, which - in its full form - ties the  freedom of the individual to the freedom of the market.
Individualism  lends itself to reactionary socio-cultural politics. Bad  individuals  are to blame for complex  social problems.  Britain is  ‘broken’ by  benefit cheats and deadbeat  dads and kids with no respect.
Individualism  is a readymade tool for those who wish to defend an economic system  that impoverishes billions while loading the wealth upon a tiny minority  who are parasitic upon the many who actually do all the work producing  value.  Wealth is created by thrusting entrepreneurs, self-made men,  brilliant  businessmen and economic geniuses. Such people must be  rewarded for their commercial heroism in order to make sure they keep on  spewing out the ambrosia of wealth, which will then trickle down upon  the lesser mortals.  The most sustained attempt to systematise the basis  of such ideas in philosophy - Objectivism - ended as a personality cult  around its founder, Ayn Rand.
If  we have problems  with how our  government behaves, we can blame  individual baddies and  vote for  individual saviours.  Failed in life?   You should’ve tried  harder.   Depressed?  Pull yourself together.  Don’t  like the  government?  Vote  for a different Prime Minister.  Etc. It's a  multi-purpose, one-size-fits-all idea. 
In  genre and fantasy, the individual  hero is omnipresent.  Holmes,  Bond,  Batman, Potter, Skywalker… the Doctor.  Even  MacMurphy and Yossarian are   individualists.  Maybe such figures  sometimes oppose Power, but there’s still something   ambivalent about  the way they do so by themselves and for themselves.    There’s  something in the radical idea of the brave individual who   opposes  conformity and obedience and injustice which tessellates with   the  reactionary libertarian bourgeois obsession with individual ‘self    made’ men, fighting and succeeding through their own strength.
The Final Promotion
When in mystical mode, the show tends to imagine that "the next step  in our evolution" will be the achievement of a kind of quasi-mystical,  post-physical godhood through the acquisition of sufficient scientific,  technological and moral knowledge or power.  The moral superiority is  usually supposed to come from a fusion of human emotions (just the good  ones) with technological advancement.  This fuses:
i)  the idealised view of science as Promethean and progressive, a  motor/guarantor of modern liberal civilisation etc., all evidence of a  certain confidence in technology stemming from the long post-war boom;
ii) a form of mysticism which prizes personal transcendence and self-realisation... very 60s-70s;
iii) a sort of benignant, sanitised Social-Darwinism which sees evolution as an upward progression.
It will be noticed that the linking threads here are 'progress', individualism, success.  Godhood is usually achieved by individuals as a kind of reward for their superior bravery, morality, love, etc.  It's like the 'First Earth Battalion', melding the martial virtues and the rise up through the ranks with detumescent 60s-70s mystical self-actualisation.
 

 
 
Do you think the same kind of individualism holds for Lord of the Rings? While some of Jackson's modifications seem to allow for it (eg I recall the book version of Faramir as providing help to Frodo and Sam), it seems like the books' heroes are often hitting up against their own lack of capability and relying on others for help. Instead, its characters seem to gather strength from a nostalgic impulse, rather than ST's technocratic one. I get the sense that its essentially anti-liberal.
ReplyDeleteHave any shows struck you as presenting an alternative paradigm to the liberal bourgeois one you describe here? The proliferation of the apocalypse genre seems to play on the same themes here: individuals rising above society, gathering the power to do what's *necessary* (usually over the say so of schoolmarm-like opposition), nail-biting action montages, weak reflections on the dangers of too much power followed by sentimental admission that it is/was *necessary*, etc... Are these techniques just more entertaining or easier to portray or are there other models out there that don't succumb to the same critiques?