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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Sabrina Mittermeier , Mareike Spychala (University of Bamberg (Germany))Publisher: Liverpool University Press Imprint: Liverpool University Press Volume: 67 ISBN: 9781789621761ISBN 10: 1789621763 Pages: 424 Publication Date: 19 June 2020 Audience: General/trade , Professional and scholarly , General , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPreface Sherryl Vint Introduction Sabrina Mittermeier & Mareike Spychala ‘Boldly Going Where No Series Has Gone Before?’ – Discovery’s Role Within The Franchise and Its Discontents Looking in the Mirror: The Negotiation of Franchise Identity in Star Trek: Discovery Andrea Whiteacre A Star Trek About Being Star Trek: History, Liberalism and Discovery’s Cold War Roots Torsten Kathke The Conscience of the King – Or: Is There In Truth No Sex and Violence? John Andreas Fuchs These Are the Voyages?: The Post-Jubilee Trek Legacy on the Discovery, the Orville, and the Callister Michael G. Robinson ‘Just as repetition reinforces repetition, change begets change’ – Modes of Storytelling in Canon and Fanon From Series to Seriality: Star Trek’s Mirror Universe in the Post-Network Era Ina Batzke ‘Lorca, I’m Really Gonna Miss Killing You’– The Fictional Space Created by Time Loop Narratives Sarah Böhlau Discovery and the Form of Victorian Periodicals Will Tattersdill To Boldly Discuss: Socio-Political Discourses in Star Trek: Discovery Fanfiction Kerstin-Anja Münderlein ‘Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combinations?’ – Negotiating Otherness in Star Trek: Discovery Afrofuturism, Imperialism, and Intersectionality Interview on Normalizing Black Women as Heroes Diana Mafe The Cotton-Gin Effect: An Afrofuturist Reading of Star Trek: Discovery Whit Frazier Peterson The American Hello: U.S. Representations of Diplomacy in Star Trek: Discovery Henrik Schillinger & Arne Sönnichsen ‘Into A Mirror Darkly’: Border Crossing and Imperial(ist) Feminism in Star Trek: Discovery Judith Rauscher Interrogating Gender Star Trek Discovers Women: Gender, Race, Science, and Michael Burnham Amy C. Chambers Not Your Daddy’s Star Trek: Exploring Female Characters in Star Trek: Discovery Mareike Spychala ‘We Choose Our Own Pain. Mine Makes Me Remember’ – Gabriel Lorca, Ash Tyler and the Question of Masculinity Sabrina Mittermeier & Jennifer Volkmer Queering Star Trek ‘Never hide who you are’: Queer Representation and Actorvism in Star Trek: Discovery Sabrina Mittermeier & Mareike Spychala ‘I never met a female Michael before’: Star Trek: Discovery between Trans Potentiality and Cis Anxiety Si Sophie Pages Whybrew Veins and Muscles of the Universe: Posthumanism and Connectivity in Star Trek: Discovery Lisa MeineckeReviews'From the philosophy of time travel and alternate dimensions to the fraught politics of representation in contemporary film and television, Fighting for the Future sets scholarly coordinates for the series that has redefined Star Trek for the twenty-first century.' Gerry Canavan, Marquette University 'This volume is a solid addition to the literature of Star Trek. As Discovery continues to chart its course alongside the other CBS productions like Picard (2020) and Lower Decks (2020), scholars will reach for this book as the first collection of analyses of the new era, which had meaningfully differentiated itself from previous entries in the franchise.' Cait Coker, The Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts ‘From the philosophy of time travel and alternate dimensions to the fraught politics of representation in contemporary film and television, Fighting for the Future sets scholarly coordinates for the series that has redefined Star Trek for the twenty-first century.’ Gerry Canavan, Marquette University 'This volume is a solid addition to the literature of Star Trek. As Discovery continues to chart its course alongside the other CBS productions... Scholars will reach for this book as the first collection of analyses of the new era, which had meaningfully differentiated itself from previous entries in the franchise.' Cait Coker, Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts 'The editors achieve a remarkable feat in this collection by providing a comprehensive look at a series still in development. … Mittermeier and Spychala end their text confident that the series has left the past in the past, while holding on to the franchise’s belief in a positive future.' Justice Hagan, Science Fiction Film and Television 'Fighting for the Future is an interesting and engaging collection of essays that examines Star Trek: Discovery as a piece of media in and of itself, as well as a piece of a much larger cultural legacy. Like other essay collections of its type, it draws on scholars from diverse disciplines who put their own spin and flavor on their scholarship.' Jessica Seymour, Ancillary Review of Books 'Fighting for the Future: Essays on Star Trek: Discovery is full of interesting, engaging, well-argued, and well-written chapters, and it should be considered an effective work of scholarship from which the fields of media, English, and American studies should get considerable worth.' Graham Minenor-Matheson, Fafnir: Nordic Journal of Science Fiction and Fantasy Research Reviews 'From the philosophy of time travel and alternate dimensions to the fraught politics of representation in contemporary film and television, Fighting for the Future sets scholarly coordinates for the series that has redefined Star Trek for the twenty-first century.' -Gerry Canavan, Marquette University Author InformationSabrina Mittermeier is a lecturer and post-doctoral researcher at the University of Augsburg. Mareike Spychala is a lecturer and research assistant in American Studies at the University of Bamberg. 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