Wrongs Darker Than Death or Night
"Wrongs Darker Than Death or Night" | |
---|---|
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode | |
Episode no. | Season 6 Episode 17 |
Directed by | Jonathan West |
Written by | Ira Steven Behr Hans Beimler |
Featured music | Jay Chattaway |
Production code | 541 |
Original air date | March 30, 1998 |
Guest appearances | |
| |
"Wrongs Darker Than Death or Night" is the 141st episode of the science fiction television series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, the 17th episode of the sixth season.
Set in the 24th century, the series takes place on Deep Space Nine, a fictional space station near the planet Bajor, as the Bajorans recover from a brutal decades-long occupation by the Cardassians. In this episode, Gul Dukat, the Cardassian former prefect of Bajor, tells Major Kira Nerys, a Bajoran, that her mother was once his lover, and Kira time-travels to the days of the occupation in order to find the truth.
Production and development
[edit]"Wrongs Darker than Death or Night" aired in 1998 as the 17th episode of American science fiction television series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine's 6th season.[1] Jonathan West directed the episode,[2] and Ira Steven Behr and Hans Beimler wrote the screenplay.[3] Leslie Hope guest-starred as Kira Meru.[4] Marc Alaimo plays Dukat, and Thomas Kopache portrays Kira Taban.[5] Other guest actors include David Bowe as Basso Tromac, and Wayne Grace as Legate Parek.
The title of the show was developed by Hans Beimler, and it was meant to contrast with prior titles.[6][7] The phrase is in a passage in Prometheus Unbound by Percy Bysshe Shelley, a drama published in 1820.[8]
To suffer woes which Hope thinks infinite;
To forgive wrongs darker than death or night;
To defy Power, which seems omnipotent;
To love, and bear; to hope till Hope creates
Plot
[edit]On the 60th birthday of Kira Nerys's late mother Meru, whom Kira knows through her father Taban as having been an anticolonial hero who died in a refugee camp,[5] recurring Cardassian antagonist Dukat sends a message to Kira telling her that Meru was his lover.[9] Kira obtains station commander Benjamin Sisko's permission to consult the Bajoran Orb of Time to find out the truth.[5]
The Orb sends Kira into a vision of the past, thirty years prior to the episode's present.[4] Kira appears in a refugee center where her family once lived. There she befriends Meru, using the name "Luma Rahl". "Luma" and Meru are taken from the camp to become "comfort women" for Cardassian troops. The women are taken to the new space station Terok Nor—the future Deep Space Nine. There, despite her sadness, Meru is overwhelmed by the bounty of food and other comforts. She confesses to Nerys that she has what she always dreamed of — good health, beautiful clothes, enough to eat — but at the cost of her family. Gul Dukat singles Meru out for special attention, and she eventually becomes Dukat's mistress. When Nerys confronts a guard and demands to see Meru, she is thrown out into the station's Bajoran ghetto. There Halb, a member of the Bajoran resistance, asks her to help attack the Cardassians.
The next time Nerys sees her mother, Meru praises Dukat, and it is too much for Nerys to bear. She angrily reminds Meru that Dukat is not only responsible for killing innocent Bajorans, but also for separating her from her family. Meru explains that Dukat has promised to provide her husband and children with food and medical supplies. Nerys accuses Meru of becoming a collaborator and storms out, hatching a plan with Halb to smuggle a bomb into Dukat's quarters. Her mother could be killed in the blast, but Nerys no longer cares. Pretending to have had a change of heart, Nerys returns to Dukat's quarters to apologize to Meru, then secretly hides the bomb.
Kira then sees Meru receive a message from her husband Taban. He thanks his wife for the resources her companionship to Dukat has afforded for their family: the Cardassians released him and Kira Nerys from the refugee camp, allowed them return to their farm, and provide them with extra food. Kira, realizing that she owes her survival as a child and even her capacity to participate in the Bajoran resistance to her mother, has a change of heart and warns Dukat and Meru about the bomb, and they escape just before it detonates.[10]
The vision ends, and Kira returns to the present. She tells Sisko what she learned. The episode resolves ambivalently, Kira concluding that despite how outraged she feels at Meru's collaboration with Dukat and the Cardassians, "no matter what she did, she was still my mother".[11]
Interpretation
[edit]Academics have commented on the episode's psychological meanings. "Wrongs Darker than Death or Night" is the final episode in what cultural geographer David Seitz called "the Kira parental grief trilogy", the other episodes in this informal trilogy being "Second Skin" and "Ties of Blood and Water", which focused on Kira's relationships to paternal figures, including her dead father Taban.[12] In this trilogy, and in "Wrongs", Deep Space Nine depicts Kira as having a tremendous "capacity to empathize" by "integrat[ing] love and aggression", in Seitz's words: building on the theory of psychonalayst Melanie Klein, Seitz argues that without forgiving Meru for her collaboration or forgetting her outrage at Cardassian colonial atrocities, Kira nevertheless "learns to live with ambivalence" and recognize that life involves complicated interrelationship.[13] Psychologist Sherry Ginn argued that "Wrongs Darker than Death or Night" evokes the first stage of psychonalayst Erik Erikson's stages of psychosocial development, trust and mistrust, as although Kira Nerys's "trust in the reality of her childhood is shaken", witnessing her mother Meru go to great lengths to ensure Kira Nerys's survival justifies "the trust she developed with respect to her parents as a young child".[14]
Reception
[edit]This episode had Nielsen ratings of 4.6 when it was broadcast in 1998, which equates to about 4.5 million viewers.[15] Tor.com gave the episode a 7 out of 10 rating.[8] Comic Book Resources ranked "Wrongs Darker than Death or Night" as the 6th darkest Deep Space Nine episodes.[16] In 2018, SyFy recommend this episode for its abbreviated watch guide for the Bajoran character Kira Nerys.[17]
References
[edit]- ^ Hark (2023, pp. 5, 15, 15n22).
- ^ Grech (2017, p. 18).
- ^ Hark (2023, p. 15n22).
- ^ a b Hark (2023, p. 15).
- ^ a b c Ginn (2022, p. 71).
- ^ "Writer-Producer Ira Steven Behr Talks Love & Hate for DS9, The Dominion War, Favorite Guest Stars, and His Relationship with Rick Berman". TREKNEWS.NET. 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2020-01-13.
- ^ Ira Behr (July 6, 2011). "Ira Steven Behr Remembers DS9, Part 2". StarTrek.com (Interview).
that was probably my favorite title because it proved a point.
- ^ a b DeCandido, Keith R. A. (2014-10-07). "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Rewatch: "Wrongs Darker than Death or Night"". Tor.com. Retrieved 2020-01-13.
- ^ Seitz (2017, p. 413).
- ^ Seitz (2017, pp. 413–414).
- ^ Seitz (2017, p. 414).
- ^ Seitz (2017, pp. 410–415).
- ^ Seitz (2017, pp. 413–415).
- ^ Ginn (2022, pp. 71–72).
- ^ "WebTrek - Star Trek: Deep Space Nine * SEASON 6 NIELSEN RATINGS". Archived from the original on 2018-04-23. Retrieved 2018-04-24.
- ^ CBR The 15 Darkest Episodes of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine 02.11.2017 by Alexandra August
- ^ Krishna, Swapna (2018-01-16). "A binge-watching guide to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine's Kira Nerys". SYFY WIRE. Archived from the original on 2019-07-23. Retrieved 2020-01-09.
Bibliography
[edit]- Ginn, Sherry (2022). "Trauma, Psychological Development, and the Triumph of Kira Nerys". In Ginn, Sherry; Cornelius, Michael G. (eds.). To Boldly Stay: Essays on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. McFarland & Company. pp. 67–85. ISBN 978-1-4766-8540-3.
- Grech, Victor (October 2017). "Crime and Punishment in Star Trek: Genocide and War Crimes" (PDF). The New York Review of Science Fiction. Vol. 29, no. 7. pp. 1, 10–18.
- Hark, Ina Rae (2023). "Occupied Space: The Contested Habitation of Terok Nor/Deep Space Nine". In Hawkes, Joel; Christie, Alexander; Nienhuis, Tom (eds.). American Science Fiction Television and Space: Productions and (Re)configurations (1987–2021). Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 5–20. doi:10.1007/978-3-031-10528-9. ISBN 978-3-031-10527-2.
- Seitz, David K. (December 2017). "Second Skin, White Masks: Postcolonial Reparation in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine". Psychoanalysis, Culture & Society. 22 (4): 401–419. doi:10.1057/s41282-017-0043-2.
External links
[edit]- "Wrongs Darker Than Death or Night" at IMDb
- Wrongs Darker Than Death or Night at Memory Alpha
- "Wrongs Darker Than Death or Night" at Wayback Machine (archived from the original at StarTrek.com)