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I've been watching Caprica with
cowgrrl, and she posed this question last night. It's a good one, so I'm curious to see what other people think.
Caprica is a society with legalized pot, sanctioned group marriage, total acceptance of homosexuality, and general sexual freedom. But since this is a prequel to Battlestar Galactica, we know that there is soon going to be a war between Cylons and Humans leading to the eventual destruction of Caprica and the other 11 colonies.
So... is this portrayal of Caprica as a pleasure-permissive society an indication that the writers and producers believe these are features of an advanced human civilization? Or, do they indicate that Caprica is a decadent society ready to fall due to its own hubris? Or is it wrong to interpret this portrayal as delivering any sort of political statement?
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Caprica is a society with legalized pot, sanctioned group marriage, total acceptance of homosexuality, and general sexual freedom. But since this is a prequel to Battlestar Galactica, we know that there is soon going to be a war between Cylons and Humans leading to the eventual destruction of Caprica and the other 11 colonies.
So... is this portrayal of Caprica as a pleasure-permissive society an indication that the writers and producers believe these are features of an advanced human civilization? Or, do they indicate that Caprica is a decadent society ready to fall due to its own hubris? Or is it wrong to interpret this portrayal as delivering any sort of political statement?
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Date: 2010-02-07 05:45 am (UTC)I think the series, and the post series movie "The Plan" have already answered this question.
It was not the inclusive, or what certain segments insist on calling "decadent," aspects of the culture that brought about destruction. It was the intolerance - both societal and personal. For example, it wasn't the fact that Baltar liked sex that allowed Six to play him in the pilot - it was his sexism and sense of self superiority, his attempt to use her for his own gain that backfired on him.
It was a pretty common theme that self-righteous closed mindedness led to problems and seeing the "other" as non-other and worthy of equal love and respect that led to moments of salvation in BSG.