Star Trek: Essays Exploring the Final Frontier

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Product Details
Price
$106.00
Publisher
Vernon Press
Publish Date
Pages
230
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.0 X 0.56 inches | 1.02 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781648895944
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
Amy H. Sturgis earned her Ph.D. in history at Vanderbilt University, specializes in the intellectual history of speculative fiction, and teaches at Lenoir-Rhyne University and Signum University. She has taught either undergraduate or graduate classes on 'Star Wars' every year since 2015. The author of four books and the editor/co-editor of ten others, Sturgis has published essays on 'Star Trek' in academic anthologies such as 'Star Trek and History' and 'Common Sense: Intelligence as Presented on Popular Television', and she contributed the Foreword to the 2020 scholarly anthology 'The Transmedia Franchise of Star Wars TV'. Sturgis has been interviewed as a genre expert in a variety of programs and publications such as NPR's "Talk of the Nation," 'The Huffington Post', and 'LIFE Magazine'. Sturgis also contributes the "Looking Back on Genre History" segment to the Hugo Award-winning podcast 'StarShipSofa'.
Emily Strand teaches comparative religion and cultural competence courses at Mt. Carmel College in Columbus, Ohio. She co-hosts the podcasts Potterversity and Meet Father Rivers.
Reviews

The critical anthology 'Star Trek: Essays Exploring the Final Frontier, ' edited by Amy H. Sturgis and Emily Strand, will surprise and inform readers from beginning to end. In the foreword, science fiction scholar and novelist Una McCormack asks, "Why 'Star Trek'?" These essays answer that question over and over again with original perspectives, scholarly research, and thorough analysis of the 'Star Trek' media universe. Divided into three sections, "Exploring the Series and Films," "Exploring the Ideas," and "Exploring the Multimedia Storytelling," this collection features deep dives into characters like Jonathan Archer and Seven of Nine, as well as broader investigations of the political, imperial, ecological, and linguistic systems at work on the futuristic Final Frontier. The essays range widely in content, from discussions of ancient Greece and Rome in the 'Original Series' and conspiracy theories in 'Voyager, ' to series-wide studies of the creation of fictional languages and the consequences of imagining a future with infinite energy resources. Despite its range and variety, the anthology provides a rich, coherent understanding of how the series' creators, writers, actors and fans have worked together to develop the most popular and challenging speculative fiction series of our era. Ultimately, and in the best tradition of science fiction, these critical essays on 'Star Trek' provide insight not only into this franchise but into our present, very human selves-our struggles, our prejudices, and our dreams.


Dr. Kathryn N. McDaniel

Andrew U. Thomas Professor of History

Chair, Department of History, Philosophy, Religion, and Gender Studies

Marietta College