In celebration of Women’s History Month, Kathleen and I have joined up with some other amazing bloggers to celebrate! A group of eight of us are each picking a fictional fearless female to feature. I had the pleasure of participating in another blogging series last year, The Great Chis Debate, in which several of us argued who the best cinematic Chris was (Chris Pine was absolutely the winner) but in this series, there are no winners, as each woman featured in the next few weeks are fabulous and ALL are deserving of praise.
Our series was expertly kicked off by the Green Onion, who wrote about Ellen Ripley of Alien movie fame. Ripley was a perfect starting point as “She represents all that is great in a heroic character and being a woman doesn’t define her, it’s just a part of who she is” and led to other excellent portrayals of women in film and on television. That now leads me to my choice for our #FictionsFearlessFemales series: Captain Kathryn Janeway of the Star Trek Voyager crew played brilliantly by Kate Mulgrew.
Star Trek is my favorite fandom, as many of the posts on my blog revolve around the movies, television and web series that have been inspired by the original classic. In the first series we were introduced to Uhura, who was beautiful, smart, ambitious and equal to the men- she was the original Star Trek role model. All strong female Star Trek characters owe a debt to her, and we were blessed with other great women in the Star Fleet universe such as Doctor Beverly Crusher and Deanna Troi of The Next Generation series, plus Kira Nerys and Jadzia Dax of Deep Space Nine. But Star Trek took the next logical and needed step of having a new series feature a female captain, with subsequent series Enterprise and Discovery building off Janeway’s pioneering role.
In 1995 Voyager premiered with the perfect captain who I picked as best captain in my earlier post My Perfect Star Trek Crew. The series premise was for the newly launched U.S.S. Voyager crew to track down an infiltrated Maquis ship and bring them to justice. The Maquis were a paramilitary terrorist group in which Janeway had sent her Security Officer in as an undercover operative and had enlisted a disgraced former Starfleet officer who had been a gun for hire for the Maquis to help find them. Voyager’s crew and the Maquis fighters are accidentally drawn 70,000 light-years to the far side of the Delta Quadrant by an alien seeking survival, calling itself “The Caretaker.” The Voyager and Maquis crews have to form a tentative bond to survive once both ships are compromised and they have to unite into one crew as they face the reality that it will take them 75 years to get back home.
Through seven seasons the Voyager crew explored and engaged with alien species they were completely unfamiliar with as they journeyed home. Through several dangerous maneuvers and battling of wits, they were able to get back into Federation space in seven years. Janeway was the perfect captain for this journey, for faced with extraordinary pressures, she united two warring factions and built a unified crew out of former enemies. Faced with an untenable situation, she came out stronger than ever. There were times she made some questionable decisions, including cutting off her glorious long hair (I loved her ever-changing hairstyles and buns), but her imperfections and quirks made her relatable.
As with many iconic characters, the real-life actors and actresses become forever tied to their roles, and Kate Mulgrew is no exception. She just recently wrapped a well-regarded six-season arc as Red in the television series Orange is the New Black but she will always be remembered as Captain Janeway. Thus, I loved finding this tweet on International Women’s Day, which was also the day this blogging series launched. She is fully supportive of a new captain in our universe- Captain Marvel! Having females support other females is so important, and never detracts from the original’s glory.
Star Trek presents an idealistic and Utopian future, with Earth moving past its racial and cultural differences, and ready to explore space. The tagline was “Space: the final frontier. These are the voyages of the starship Enterprise. Its five-year mission: to explore strange new worlds. To seek out new life and new civilizations. To boldly go where no man has gone before!”. And boldly go it did- the series gave us a groundbreaking captain that was not defined by her being a female. She was an example of grace under fire who exemplified remarkable leadership skills. Janeway not only is a hero but a role model and a perfect example of a fearless female!
As I wrap up this post, I now pass the baton to Michael of My Comic Relief who will then pass it off to my writing partner Kathleen. Other bloggers in the queue after Kathleen are Rob of My Side of the Laundry Room, Kiri of Star Wars Anonymous, Jeffrey of The Imperial Talker and bringing us home will be Kalie of Just Dread-full. Please check in weekly as this series unfolds.
Live Long and Prosper, my friends.
-Nancy
March 14, 2019 at 10:58 am
The idea that Star Trek represents, “an idealistic and Utopian future” is one of the things about the world that has always intrigued me. So often we look to dystopias in our fiction for drama and morality lessons. Using an utopia is simultaneously trickier from a writing standpoint and also more bold – to say we can create a world that’s transcended the worst we have to offer and still be an exciting and interesting narrative. The idea that gender equality would be part of that Utopian future is natural and so, so important to recognize. So kudos each iteration of Star Trek for playing this out and for ‘Voyager’ putting Kate Mulgrew in the pilot’s seat as Captain Janeway. Great post Nancy!
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March 15, 2019 at 8:45 am
I love your thoughts on using an Utopia narrative- Star Trek does it well! Captain Janeway was a great example of gender equality and how her being female had no bearing on her leadership for her skills defined her, not her gender.
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March 18, 2019 at 3:31 pm
The utopia is one of the things I really appreciate with Star Trek. I also really like that they mostly avoid unnecessary personal conflicts and show the crews as competent and professional. Too often TV-scripts seem to start fights between characters not because it makes sense but because it is a shortcut to drama. Star Trek show a future I would actually want to live in (well, mostly) and crews I would love to be a part of. And of course space travels are always cool.
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March 18, 2019 at 8:39 pm
Yes, I try to be a drama-free, so I appreciate when I see it elsewhere too. I like stability and loyalty in my relationships, so I’m sure that’s what first attracted me to Star Trek years ago.
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March 14, 2019 at 1:13 pm
Hi Nancy, from the episodes of Voyager I have seen, it seemed to me that Janeway did a great job getting the ship back to Federation space but still managed to adhere to the no interference policy of Starfleet (well. as much as possible – there was a little bit of rule bending).
I must have “sensed” that International Women’s Day and this series of articles were coming up as I recently redesigned an old lightsaber I created for another strong female character from Voyager…B’Elanna Torres. And the reason I mention B’Elanna is that during the show’s existence you could see her character arc develop greatly. To begin she despised her Klingon roots but gradually during her time on Voyager she began to embrace her heritage becoming a formidable warrior and valued crew member.
Great post and I will look out for the accompanying posts in coming weeks.
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March 15, 2019 at 8:54 am
B’Elanna was a fascinating character with her half-Klingon heritage! I enjoyed her arc from a hot headed Maquis to respected engineer who then married and had a child.
As for Janeway’s rule-bending, it was necessary! Facing a 75 year journey home- she needed to make some exceptions.
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March 15, 2019 at 1:11 pm
Yes there was some cosmic corner cutting! I really admired Janeway’s team building and crew management. It felt that the other captains were just the captain and everyone else looked up to/obeyed them whereas Janeway proved her mettle.
(And regards B’Elanna, I really liked and think the episode “Barge of the Dead” was great and a turning point for her.)
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March 14, 2019 at 9:58 pm
For someone who has never see an episode of Star Trek Voyager, I am sold that Janeway is pure badass. Brilliant addition to the series. And, I love the tweet for Captain Marvel, nice addition.
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March 15, 2019 at 8:57 am
You are right about Janeway being badass. She got shit done!
And…Kate Mulgrew’s tweet was so timely- as if she timed it just for this blog series!
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March 15, 2019 at 8:44 am
I never mentioned this before but I did used to watch Star Trek: Voyager back in the ’90s. I was in 5th grade at the time the show aired and for whatever reason I would watch it when it was on. I have fond, albeit vague memories of the show, but I do recall one time sitting with my grandma as I watched it. I am sure she was confused by it, but then again I didn’t really understand the deeper aspects of the show. Regardless, I point all of this out to simply say that my fondest memories of the show are Captain Janeway. She was, and is, a complete badass who left a mark on my mind. I may not remember everything about the show, but I am grateful I inadvertently found myself being influenced by this “fearless female” as I finished elementary school and entered middle school.
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March 15, 2019 at 9:06 am
Jeff- why did you keep your watching Star Trek a secret from me until now??? What’s great about a quality tv show and/or movie is that you can watch it at different times of your life and get something new from it. You might have enjoyed the action as a child, but if you re-watched it now you’d pull something different out of it. When I first started watching the show I looked up to Janeway as a leader I could aspire to, now years later re-watching it I realized I am Mulgrew’s age when she was filming, so I realize through my life experiences of now being a wife & mother, what she might have been feeling.
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March 18, 2019 at 8:42 am
My apologies friend Nancy! I guess it never crossed my mind because I so rarely think about my time watching ST Voyager. It was so long ago, and has only left impressions, that I have little to say other than my general remembrance of Mulgrew. Still, I am glad you wrote about her because it sparked some of those memories.
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April 1, 2019 at 8:32 am
My husband introduced me to Voyager via Netflix. Janeway is easily one of my favorite Star Trek characters now. Well done!
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April 1, 2019 at 9:54 pm
Thank you! Janeway was a great captain- and a wonderful representation of a fearless female!
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April 5, 2019 at 3:54 pm
Great Post!
Wasn’t able to catch many Voyager episodes, but what I did see, the character of Captain Janeway was certainly the most impressive, as was Kate Mulgrew’s performance
You might be interested to see my own review of women’s roles in SF in this special International Women’s Day feature:
https://bradscribe.wordpress.com/2019/03/08/the-woman-is-breaking-free-the-evolution-and-revolution-of-women-in-sf/
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April 5, 2019 at 6:10 pm
Kate Mulgrew certainly made Captain Janeway impressive!
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