Episode Details
Back to EpisodesUtopia’s Spare Parts: Star Trek & Ishiguro
Description
The “Hideous Bargain” moves from metaphor to the operating table.
In this episode, we let loose the bonds of metaphor in Le Guin’s “Omelas” and meet the visceral reality of clinical labor. We examine how the “Sanitization of Language” allows societies—from the United Federation of Planets to modern biotechnology markets—to rebrand human suffering as a “sacred honor” or a “net gain”.
“We explore the “clinical labor” of Star Trek and Never Let Me Go. We re-story the “Redshirt” trope through the lens of necropolitics and the ethical extractions of the modern bioeconomy.
Episode 6.29 –
Utopia’s Spare Parts: Star Trek & Ishiguro
Readings & Resources:
- Ishiguro, Kazuo - Never Let Me Go (2005)
- “Lift Us Where Suffering Cannot Reach,” Star Trek: Strange New Worlds. Season 1, Episode 6 (2022)
- Mbembe, Achille – Necropolitics (2019)
- Scarry, Elaine - The Body in Pain: The Making and Unmaking of the World (1985)
- Waldby, Catherine & Melinda Cooper - Clinical Labor: Tissue Inventory and the Embodied Economies of Regenerative Medicine (2014)
- Singer, Peter - Practical Ethics (2011)
- Haraway, Donna - “A Cyborg Manifesto” (found in Simians, Cyborgs, and Women, 1991)
Some Key Terms from this episode:
- Clinical Labor - The extraction of biological value (tissues, organs, experimental data) from the human body as an economic resource.
- Habitus - Our “social autopilot,” the internalized set of habits and worldviews, shaped by our upbringing, that makes certain paths feel “natural” while others remain literally unthinkable
- Homo Sacer - [Homo SAH-cher], An individual reduced to “bare life”; excluded from legal protection and able to be killed without it being a crime.
- Necropolitics - The use of social and political power to dictate how some people may live and how some must die.
- Sanitization of Language – The use of euphemisms (e.g., “completion” instead of death) to make unethical systems palatable.
Listener’s Guide Reflection Questions
- When we encounter a “sanitized label” like “economic downsizing,” what physical extractions are hidden by the syntax?
- In what ways does our own “habitus” make social sacrifices feel like inevitable “canon events” rather than choices?
- If a “docile body” accepts its own exploitation/extraction, does that change the nature of the bargain, or just the visibility of our choices?
- How does the concept of “clinical labor” reframe the human body as a “mathematical” utilitarian equation?
- If empathy has “limits” within a walled ideological system, what other strategies may help us overcome those walls?
Complete Resources: https://waywordsstudio.com/project/le-guin-omelas/
CHAPTERS
00:00 Crewman, We Hardly Knew You
07:43 Intro Theme
08:19 Extractions of