Looking back at Battlestar Galactica

I stumbled across the 2004 Battlestar Galactica on Amazon Prime and started watching it again. I remember enjoying the original series long, long ago (trailers for both shows below):

When the new one came out, I realized what was missing from the original series: the collective trauma of the surprise attack on the civilian culture. After the initial episodes, while humanity was still on the run, that trauma seemed missing. It was, in my memory, a light hearted show. But post-9/11, the 2004 writers understood cultural trauma from the smaller scale terrorist attacks and could extrapolate out the effects of a genocidal one. Thus understood a society willing to dehumanize the enemy and use torture (and how ineffectual torture actually is). The show had a dark, more psychologically-introspective tone.

In some ways, it reminded me of watching the Laurence Olivier Henry V and the Kenneth Branagh Henry V (which I did back to back once – my roommate was a film major and it was an assignment). The first was made towards the end of WWII and intended as a morale booster. The heroism of war is quite romanticized. The latter has a much more modern, grittier version of war (I’d say post-Vietnam, but it’s a British production). 

All this struck me anew as I rewatch the 2004 series. And rewatching a show about humans creating AI that then destroys them now has a new frisson in the age of LLMs and the pursuit of actual AI.

Another thing that struck me was, quite frankly, the bathrooms. The bathrooms on the battleship are all gender-neutral.

It struck me when I first watched and even more on this rewatching because the US is so weird about bathrooms and gender. Even restaurants with two single-stall rooms will feel the need often to label them as male and female – even though only one person will be in the locked room at a time. 

I will say at my school, the best bathroom is gender neutral. Each of the stalls is completely closed off with an actual door and then in the main part of the room a long sink runs down the opposite wall. It’s newish and definitely recognized as the best bathroom on campus – my Latin students used it as a Percy Jackson scavenger hunt goal (mentioning where Clarisse tried to dunk Percy and that it was the best version on campus).

But yet bathrooms keep being the center of political battles. I remember the fight against the Equal Rights Amendment included the horrors that it might lead to gender-neutral bathrooms! And transgender rights battles also come back to that. What is our collective hang up about bathrooms?

Author: gretaham

teacher, writer, baker, biker (the pedal kind), hiker, swimmer, reader, movie buff, cat owner

One thought on “Looking back at Battlestar Galactica”

  1. Oddly, even MAGAnauts take gender-neutral restrooms in stride when they are on an airplane.

    I have also wondered about the weird attitudes about bathrooms, which sort of extends to body functions in general. It reminds me of the mind/body (or spirit/flesh) duality (mind & spirit good, body & flesh bad), and the idea of “purity” as an ideal (and idealized) way of life, with physicality minimized. Gnosticism perhaps is to blame.

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