This article examines how contemporary media representations challenge or reinforce dominant cultural assumptions about bodily difference through an analysis of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine ’s episode ‘Melora’. Drawing on Garland-Thomson’s observation that media representations both reflect and shape broader social understandings of impairment, this study employs discourse analysis to examine disability portrayals in science fiction. The central argument posits that authentic representations of disability have the potential to subvert traditional frameworks by presenting characters with disabilities as complex individuals shaped by cultural, social and environmental factors rather than solely by physical differences. The analysis utilizes social, cultural, relational and medical approaches to disability, incorporating Mitchell and Snyder’s concept of narrative prosthesis and the cultural model of disability. Through detailed examination of Melora Pazlar, an Elaysian Starfleet officer whose wheelchair use results from her body’s adaptation to low-gravity environments, the study demonstrates how progressive media can challenge ableist assumptions while avoiding both pathologizing medical model approaches and overly romanticized portrayals that deny material realities of impairment.
Melissa Marsden (Mon,) studied this question.