"My name is John Crichton. 'I'm lost'. An astronaut. Shot through a wormhole. In some distant part of the universe. 'I'm trying to stay alive'. Aboard this ship. 'This living ship'. Of escaped prisoners." During its fourth and - for the present - final season, "Farscape" was the Sci-Fi Channel's highest rated original series. With its dedicated fan-base, "Farscape" seasons are still top-billing Sci-Fi DVDs. This first proper analysis of the show, written by a scholar-fan, uncovers "Farscape's" layers and those of the living spaceship Moya. Jes Battis proposes that "Farscape" is as much about bodies, sex and gender, as it is about wormholes, space ships and interstellar warfare. It is this straddling of genres that makes the show so viewable to such a broad audience, of which almost half are women. He explores "Farscape's" language and characters, including Moya, its creation of 'family and home', of masculinity and femininity, and the transformation of an all-American boy.
ISBN: | 9781845113421 |
Publication date: | 30th March 2007 |
Author: | Jes Battis |
Publisher: | I.B. Tauris an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing PLC |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 256 pages |
Series: | Investigating Cult TV |
Genres: |
Television Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000 Science Fiction |