Star Trek: Open a Channel: A Woman's Trek
By Nana Visitor.
Published by Insight Editions.
Published 2024.
Hardcover.
ASIN: B0C7P8NTH2
ISBN-13: 979-8886633016
Description:
Nana Visitor, Star Trek’s Kira Nerys, explores how
the series has portrayed and influenced women. Interviews with the stars,
writers, producers, and celebrity fans reveal the struggles and triumphs of
women both behind and in front of the camera throughout the sixty-year history
of Star Trek, and how they have mirrored the experiences of women
everywhere.
The groundbreaking casting of Nichelle Nichols as Lt. Uhura
in 1966 was a paradigm shift for women and people of color. Pioneering is no
picnic, and she planned to leave the show until none other than the Reverend
Martin Luther King, Jr. contextualized her appearance in people’s living rooms
across America as a way for people of color to know they were indeed an
important part of the future.
Since then, each Star Trek show has both reflected
the values of its time and imagined a future of equality. In her first book, Open
a Channel: A Woman’s Trek, Nana Visitor sets out to discover both how Star
Trek led the way for women, and how each show was trapped in its own era.
For Visitor, this is more than a book about Star Trek.
It’s also about how society and the stories we tell have evolved in the last
sixty years, and how the role of women has changed in that time.
STAR AUTHOR: Written by Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
actor Nana Visitor, famous for playing Major Kira Nerys. This is both her story
and her journey through the stories of other women involved with Star Trek
from the 1960s to the 21st century.
EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEWS: Features interviews with more than a
dozen women who starred in Star Trek, including Kate Mulgrew, Sonequa
Martin-Green, Terry Farrell, Gates McFadden, Denise Crosby, Tawny Newsome, and
Jess Bush.
INSPIRING STORIES: Explore how Star Trek has
influenced women in the real world, including soldiers, scientists, and even
astronauts. For the book, author Nana Visitor visited ESA HQ and interviewed
astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti while she was in orbit around Earth on the
International Space Station.
PIONEERING SERIES: Following the humanistic
tenets of creator Gene Roddenberry, Star Trek, throughout the decades,
led the way in promoting diversity. Youths who grew up with Captain Janeway on Star
Trek: Voyager, for example, not only learned to accept a woman as a leader
but were also able to expand what they could imagine for themselves. The book
makes clear how important storytelling is, and how the storytelling of Star
Trek has had a profound effect on its audience.
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