What is “Vaka Rangi”?
The name Vaka Rangi
comes from the common language of the Polynesian islands and the area
making up the larger geopolitical region known as “Oceania”. Although
each region in the Polynesian triangle has its own variations on it, it
is commonly believed all of these dialects can be traced back to a
common language, which would account for the striking similarities to be
found in all of them.
The Ancient Polynesians and their ancestors were simply put the greatest mariners the world has ever seen and the term vaka
(meaning canoe, or canoe hull, in several languages) displays the
centrality of the concept to their culture. Spurred on primarily by
limited resources and the need to manage sustainable populations, the
Ancient Polynesians used voyaging canoes to settle remote and previously
unpopulated islands throughout the Pacific Ocean, and many scholars
claim they further managed to reach any shore that touched the Pacific
and Southern Oceans. The Ancient Polynesians were explorers, navigators,
poets, mystics and philosophers, not conquerors or empire-builders: For
them, each vaka was not merely a watercraft or a means to an end, but a
microcosm of Polynesian society and an island unto itself symbolizing
the interconnectedness of the village, the sea, the Earth and the
Heavens.
Rangi is thought to be derived from the hypothesized proto-Polynesian word “*laŋi”,
meaning the sky, or the heavens. The variant “rangi” is found in
several Polynesian languages, most notably that of the Maori and Rapa
Nui. In Polynesian Reconstruction, a vaka is often given a secondary
name to distinguish itself and its people, thus a “Vaka Rangi” would be
“A Canoe for the Stars”.
Today, traditional Polynesian
navigation is undergoing a renaissance, bolstered by, among other
things, the rediscovery of ancient oral history and techniques on the
outlying island of Taumako and a renewed sense of cultural pride in
places such as Hawai'i and Samoa. Fleets of vaka once again roam the
Pacific, this time to share their message of solidarity with the natural
world. It is this spiritual exploration of the universe's
interconnectedness that has been a guiding inspiration for my life and
provided the impetus for this project, which I hope will help translate
these concepts for those who, like me, grew up during Western
post-industrialism. I felt the best way to explore this was to call upon
another major interest of mine: Experimental comparative media studies.
What This Project Is
Vaka
Rangi is the account of a spiritual journey. Vaka Rangi is a personal
memoir. Vaka Rangi is an unauthorized post-structuralist critical
history of Star Trek. Vaka Rangi is many things at once.
Fundamentally,
this project an attempt at a critical history of utopian futurism in
televised science fiction, particularly science fiction involving
voyaging starships, from a specific perspective and using the Star Trek
franchise as a “guiding text”. I chose Star Trek for a number of
reasons, most notably for its substantial cultural capital in Western
regions and my personal connection to it. I coined the term “Soda Pop
Art” in another blog project of mine to refer to a product of
commercialized pop culture that attains enough significance and ubiquity
to become a kind of shared Western mythology. It is my belief Western
cultures have a unique shared oral history all to themselves, but one
that is paradoxically and often problematically bound up with concepts
like corporatism, copyright and profit. It's this contradictory dualism
that I invented the term “Soda Pop Art” to convey, and Star Trek is the
Soda Pop Art that is the archetypical utopian voyaging starship story.
This
blog is also the account of my personal history with Star Trek and
similar science fiction stories and the many ways I have interacted with
it throughout my life, but also the many ways in which I've found
myself in opposition to it. My primary aim here is twofold: Firstly, it
is to offer a unique critical re-evaluation and reinterpretation of Star
Trek, and more generally the concept of the voyaging starship series,
around themes of sustainability, communalisim, spiritualism, idealism
and the troubled relationship between exploration and imperialism in
Western literature. I'm particularly interested in how these themes have
been dealt with and interpreted by various creative teams at various
points in history and the repercussions caused by them being examined
via Soda Pop Art. At the same time, Vaka Rangi is also an examination of
my own positionality and how that has shaped my reading of Star Trek
and works like it over time.
What This Project Is Not
Despite
using Star Trek as a kind of “guiding text”, concerning itself with the
series' ups and downs and frequently looking at various licensed
spin-off works, Vaka Rangi is fundamentally not an attempt to craft a
definitive, authorial history of the franchise. As it's structured
around very specific themes and is at once built around my personal
experiences with Star Trek and larger than it, readers already versed in
Star Trek fandom might be surprised to find the sorts of things I've
chosen to include in this critical history, and indeed some of the
things I've chosen to omit. Perhaps strangely, given my extensive
history with it, I only consider myself a casual Star Trek fan and this
project reflects that. Those looking for episode guides, cast lists,
discussions of canon, in-universe minutiae and behind-the-scenes
information won't find it here and would be better served by something
like the tremendous Star Trek wiki Memory Alpha
or the great dead tree work of Paula Block and Terry J. Erdmann (both
of which are sources I highly recommend). I'm interested in exploring
one specific strain of thought within the franchise, not in writing a
comprehensive documentation of every single thing ever to go out under
the Star Trek banner.
How This Blog Works
I
will be going through most, but not all, the works under the Star Trek
name on a roughly episode-by-episode basis with frequent tangents
(called "Sensor Scans") to look at related books, TV shows, movies and
other comparable works. I'll also put a heavy emphasis on certain Star
Trek spin-off projects in posts under the header "Myriad Universes" and
plan to examine at length different aspects of Star Trek history and
lore as a way of tracking how different groups and individuals have
interpreted the franchise over the years in the "Ship's Log,
Supplemental" posts. As Star Trek is Soda Pop Art, and a very ubiquitous
breed of it at that. the merchandise side of the franchise is something
I'll have to address as well: At the moment I plan to deal with that
side of things in the "Totemic Artefacts" sections and, once the time
comes for them, "Flight Simulators", i.e. video games. New entries will
go up on this site each and every Monday, Wednesday and Friday for as
long as I can stretch this theme and metaphor out.
Star
Trek is an entity that has had a profound effect on my life and will
remain a part of me forever. This is my best attempt at expressing why
and how. I do hope you'll find the journey as rewarding and as
enlightening as it will be for me.
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