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Far Beyond the Stars

"Far Beyond the Stars" is the 137th episode of the syndicated science fiction television series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, the 13th episode of season 6. The teleplay was written by Ira Steven Behr and Hans Beimler, based on a story by Marc Scott Zicree, and directed by Avery Brooks, who also played the episode's – and series' – central character.

"Far Beyond the Stars"
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode
Episode no.Season 6
Episode 13
Directed byAvery Brooks
Story byMarc Scott Zicree
Teleplay by
Featured musicDennis McCarthy
Cinematography byJonathan West
Production code538
Original air dateFebruary 9, 1998 (1998-02-09)
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
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"Who Mourns for Morn?"
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Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (season 6)
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Set in the 24th century, the series takes place on Deep Space Nine, a fictional space station adjacent to the galaxy's only known stable wormhole. In this episode, Captain Benjamin Sisko is worn down by the stress of the ongoing war with the hostile Dominion. During a visit from his father, he experiences dream-like visions of being an African-American science-fiction writer facing racism in mid–20th century New York City. The main cast of the series, along with several recurring cast members, portray 20th-century humans in Sisko's vision; those who play alien characters appear in this episode unusually without their alien costumes and makeup.

The episode received positive reviews and has been identified by critics as one of the best episodes of the Star Trek franchise as a whole.[1] It was novelized by Steven Barnes.[2]

Plot Edit

Distraught by the death of a friend in the Dominion War, Captain Benjamin Sisko contemplates leaving Starfleet. He begins experiencing hallucinations of 20th-century New York City, and is suddenly taken over by his vision: becoming Benny Russell, an African-American science fiction writer in 1953, who is not conscious of his life in the 24th century.

Russell encounters people who bear the likeness of people from Sisko's life on Deep Space Nine, such as a newsstand vendor who resembles his son's friend Nog. His fellow writers for the magazine Incredible Tales include Albert Macklin (Miles O'Brien); the short-tempered, left-wing Herbert Rossoff (Quark); and married couple Kay Eaton (Kira Nerys) and Julius Eaton (Julian Bashir). The magazine's illustrator Roy Ritterhouse (Martok) shows them sketches to be used in an upcoming issue; Russell is drawn to one of a space station resembling Deep Space Nine, and offers to write the story for it. Magazine editor Douglas Pabst (Odo) tells Kay (who writes under a gender-neutral name) and Russell they are to be excluded from upcoming staff photos, as the magazine's readers might object to a woman and a "Negro" as science fiction writers.

That night, Russell is harassed by two white police officers, Ryan (Dukat) and Mulkahey (Weyoun). He encounters a street preacher (Joseph Sisko) who seems to be speaking directly to him, imploring him to "write those words" in the name of "the Prophets". Russell goes home and begins to write.

Some time later, he finishes his story "Deep Space Nine", about the black captain of a space station. His girlfriend Cassie (Kasidy Yates) doubts his ability to earn a living as a writer, but is faithful to him despite flirtation from baseball player Willie Hawkins (Worf). A young hustler, Jimmy (Jake Sisko), laughs at Russell's idea of "colored people on the Moon".

At the magazine, the entire staff loves his story, including Pabst's secretary Darlene Kursky (Jadzia Dax); however, Pabst refuses to print it on the grounds that the readers won't like a story with a black protagonist. But Russell keeps writing sequels to the story, and Macklin proposes a compromise: frame the story as just a dream, which Pabst reluctantly agrees to. While Russell and Cassie are out celebrating, Jimmy is shot and killed by officers Ryan and Mulkahey. When Russell protests, they beat him savagely.

On his first day back at the office weeks later, Russell is eager to see his story in print. Pabst arrives empty-handed: the owner has pulped this month's issue rather than publish a story featuring a black hero, and Russell is fired. Russell breaks down, screaming that they cannot destroy his ideas and that the future he envisions is real. As he is taken away by an ambulance, the preacher appears next to him, and tells him that he is both the dreamer and the dream.

Sisko wakes up back on the station. He is deeply moved by his vision and wonders if somewhere, far beyond the stars, Benny Russell is really out there, dreaming of them.

Production Edit

Conception Edit

Zicree – who was not a regular writer for the series – pitched the story with Jake Sisko as the main character, and did not deal directly with racial issues. He originally patterned the Bashir/Kira characters on Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore, and the O'Brien character on Isaac Asimov.[3] This story was combined with ideas that story editor Robert Hewitt Wolfe had written for a script called "Cold and Distant Stars", a very early draft for the season 3 two-part episode "Past Tense". The story, suggested by Wolfe, featured Sisko as a contemporary homeless man who believes he is a star base captain, but who is diagnosed as schizophrenic and drugged to suppress his visions. At that time, producer Ira Steven Behr had rejected the hallucinatory element in favor of a time-travel story, because it felt too much like a "gimmick".[4][5] Researcher Allen Kwan wrote that the episode may have originally featured a more positive ending, where instead of showing Benny hospitalized with a breakdown, it would show him on a set, producing an episode of Deep Space Nine; that ending was reportedly not used for fears of breaking the continuity of the franchise.[6]

Design Edit

The production crew included several references to past Star Trek series and episodes, as well as other science fiction series. For instance, a memo from Pabst to Rossoff is visible in the office, complaining to him that "no one would believe that a cheerleader could kill vampires", a reference to Shimerman's role as Principal Snyder on Buffy the Vampire Slayer.[5]

Much work was put into making the New York City presented look authentic. Brooks, who both directed the episode and played Sisko/Russell, went to great lengths to ensure period authenticity, even during post-production. Brooks went to the music spotting session, and had long discussions about things such as what music Russell would dance to, and the style of the scoring. The only other Star Trek director to attend a music spotting session was LeVar Burton, when working on Star Trek: The Next Generation. Inequality was also portrayed through design; the ambulance which carries Benny was portrayed as dirty and outdated because, as Brooks notes, "that's what they would have sent."[5]

Filming and makeup Edit

 
Avery Brooks both directed the episode and played Sisko/Russell.

Brooks was chosen to direct by the production staff because they wanted a director who had personally experienced racism.[5] The scene where Russell collapses and has a breakdown was perhaps more realistic than most fans had realized. Once the assistant director called cut, Brooks did not stop. Brooks was so into the part that, as Lou Race remarked, even if he had stayed for half an hour, Brooks would have "kept on".[7]

The cast had little trouble separating their characters in this episode from the ones they normally played. Ira Stephen Behr, for instance, had been concerned at how René Auberjonois might react to being the only main cast member to play a "bad guy". However, Auberjonois loved the part, and was delighted to play it. Armin Shimerman (Quark/Rossoff) agreed, claiming that Rossoff is not an extension of Quark, as Rossoff, a communist, was "about as far from a Ferengi as you can get".[5] Jeffrey Combs (Weyoun/Mulkahey) had some trouble at first "finding Weyoun" in Mulkahey, but realized that Mulkahey and Weyoun are both "suppressing authority figures" in Sisko's mind, and played the character from that perspective.

With few science-fiction elements, one of the few special effects in the episode was a shot where a drawing of the space station falls out of Russell's hand, and lands near the foot of a police officer. The drawing was attached to a helium balloon which was connected to some monofilament on a fishing line, and had to be "yanked" towards the foot of the officer, and land at the right orientation for the camera. Despite concerns that it could take hundreds of tries, the shot was completed on the second attempt.[5]

Makeup was unusually easy for this episode; since most characters appeared as humans, only standard makeup was required. Appearing out of costume was an unusual experience for many cast members. Shimerman said that wearing the mask for Quark normally helped him avoid being nervous about how he looked on camera, and that appearing without it was a "very bizarre" experience. J. G. Hertzler had never appeared on Deep Space Nine out of Klingon makeup as Martok, and enjoyed the role of Ritterhouse. Hertzler draws as a hobby, so when Ritterhouse was seen drawing in the episode, the actor was really drawing the cast.[5]

Reception Edit

In 2012, Den of Geek ranked this the fourth-best episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, praising the cast's performances, and called it "a treat" to see the actors such as Michael Dorn and Rene Auberjonois without their alien makeup and prosthetics.[8]

The A.V. Club's Zack Handlen said that by escaping the "trap" of cloaking its concerns in "pure symbol" that some other Star Trek episodes fall into, the episode ends up creating something unique.[9] Empire ranked "Far Beyond the Stars" 4th out of the 50 top episodes of any show Star Trek as of 2016. They also said that seeing the cast out of makeup was an "added bonus".[10] A 2015 binge-watching guide for Star Trek: Deep Space Nine by Wired recommended not skipping this "essential" episode, and said it is probably the best of the series.[11] In 2019, Den of Geek included it among the top 12 best morality plays of the Star Trek franchise.[12]

The Chicago Tribune praised the episode for having the racism it showed be on Earth, and not on some "far-flung planet". They also argued the episode would "shatter whatever remnants of that opposition [to Avery Brook's casting which still] linger".[13] The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette agreed, and said fans will consider this the "most remarkable episode in the history of Deep Space Nine", and that once Lofton's character (Jimmy) says the "N-word" – a rare departure from the franchise's generally inoffensive language – they knew they were "not on Vulcan any more".[14]

U.K. science fiction magazine and website SciFiNow ranked this one of the top ten episodes of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine in 2020, describing it as "one of the series' most powerful episodes" and commending it for taking on racism.[15]

Academic Edit

In a paper published by the Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, Allen Kwan argued that while the episode should be "given credit" for portraying racism more directly than any other episode, the ending in which Russell is institutionalized weakens the moral of the story. Parallels, Kwan claimed, can be drawn from Pabst, the racist magazine editor, to the producers of the Star Trek franchise. Kwan maintains that, like Pabst, the franchise as a whole tends to ignore actual diversity, instead opting to portray a future with only a single cultural and racial norm.[6] Jan Johnson-Smith has noted parallels between Sisko being "the dreamer and the dream" and Martin Luther King Jr's "I Have a Dream" speech.[16]

The storyline of the episode has been compared to a real-life experience of African-American science fiction author Samuel R. Delany, whose novel Nova was rejected by Analog magazine editor John W. Campbell, Jr. in 1967, claiming it was because "he didn't feel his readership would be able to relate to a black main character.[17]

Home media Edit

This was one of the episodes included in the 2007 anthology DVD box set Star Trek Fan Collective: Captain's Log; the set also includes episodes from other series in the Star Trek franchise. The other DS9 episodes included in the set were "In the Pale Moonlight" and "What You Leave Behind", and the episodes include an introduction by Avery Brooks. Brooks chose this episode to be included in the set, and an interview with him is also included.[18]

The full series of Deep Space Nine was released on DVD in 2003, and then re-released in 2017 in a box set format.[19]

References Edit

  1. ^ Ed Gross (July 27, 2016). "The 50 best Star Trek episodes ever". Empire.
  2. ^ Barnes, Steven (1998). Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Far Beyond the Stars. New York City: Pocket Books. ISBN 978-0671024307.
  3. ^ Nazzaro 1998, pp. 42–46.
  4. ^ Erdmann & Block 2000, p. 196.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Erdmann & Block 2000, p. 534-537.
  6. ^ a b Kwan, Allen (February 1, 2007). "Seeking New Civilizations: Race Normativity in the Star Trek Franchise". Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society. 27 (1): 59–70. doi:10.1177/0270467606295971. S2CID 144304868.
  7. ^ What We Left Behind: Looking Back at Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Motion picture). Shout! Factory. May 13, 2019.
  8. ^ . Den of Geek. November 11, 2012. Archived from the original on June 20, 2021. Retrieved March 18, 2021.
  9. ^ Handlen, Zack (November 14, 2013). "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: 'Far Beyond The Stars'". The A.V. Club. from the original on February 14, 2020. Retrieved February 14, 2020.
  10. ^ "The 50 best Star Trek episodes ever". Empire. July 27, 2016. Retrieved July 2, 2019.
  11. ^ McMillan, Graeme (May 13, 2015). "Wired Binge-Watching Guide: Star Trek: Deep Space Nine". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved July 23, 2019.
  12. ^ "Star Trek's 12 Best Morality Plays". Den of Geek. January 8, 2019. Retrieved July 3, 2020.
  13. ^ Johnson, Allan (February 10, 1998). "Back to the future". Chicago Tribune. p. 59. from the original on April 26, 2020. Retrieved April 26, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  14. ^ Norman, Tony (February 14, 1998). "Deep Space Nine episode boldly faces racism". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. 29. from the original on April 27, 2020. Retrieved April 27, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ "Deep Space Nine: Top Ten Episodes". SciFiNow. December 31, 2020. Retrieved June 8, 2021.
  16. ^ Johnson-Smith 2005, p. 84.
  17. ^ Canavan, Gerry (2014). Lavender, Isiah III (ed.). Black and Brown Planets: The Politics of Race in Science Fiction. Jackson MS: University Press of Mississippi. pp. 49–51.
  18. ^ Todd Douglass Jr. (August 5, 2007). "Star Trek Fan Collective - Captain's Log". DVD Talk.
  19. ^ TrekNews net Staff (February 10, 2017). "[REVIEW] Deep Space Nine Complete Series DVD Box Set". TrekNews.net. Retrieved February 19, 2021.

Sources Edit

External links Edit

  • "Far Beyond the Stars" at IMDb  
  • "Far Beyond the Stars" at Memory Alpha
  • "Far Beyond the Stars" at StarTrek.com

beyond, stars, 137th, episode, syndicated, science, fiction, television, series, star, trek, deep, space, nine, 13th, episode, season, teleplay, written, steven, behr, hans, beimler, based, story, marc, scott, zicree, directed, avery, brooks, also, played, epi. Far Beyond the Stars is the 137th episode of the syndicated science fiction television series Star Trek Deep Space Nine the 13th episode of season 6 The teleplay was written by Ira Steven Behr and Hans Beimler based on a story by Marc Scott Zicree and directed by Avery Brooks who also played the episode s and series central character Far Beyond the Stars Star Trek Deep Space Nine episodeEpisode no Season 6Episode 13Directed byAvery BrooksStory byMarc Scott ZicreeTeleplay byIra Steven Behr Hans BeimlerFeatured musicDennis McCarthyCinematography byJonathan WestProduction code538Original air dateFebruary 9 1998 1998 02 09 Guest appearancesBrock Peters as Preacher Joseph Sisko Jeffrey Combs as Kevin Mulkahey Weyoun Marc Alaimo as Burt Ryan Dukat J G Hertzler as Roy Ritterhouse Martok Aron Eisenberg as Newsboy Nog Penny Johnson Jerald as Cassie Kasidy YatesEpisode chronology Previous Who Mourns for Morn Next One Little Ship Star Trek Deep Space Nine season 6 List of episodesSet in the 24th century the series takes place on Deep Space Nine a fictional space station adjacent to the galaxy s only known stable wormhole In this episode Captain Benjamin Sisko is worn down by the stress of the ongoing war with the hostile Dominion During a visit from his father he experiences dream like visions of being an African American science fiction writer facing racism in mid 20th century New York City The main cast of the series along with several recurring cast members portray 20th century humans in Sisko s vision those who play alien characters appear in this episode unusually without their alien costumes and makeup The episode received positive reviews and has been identified by critics as one of the best episodes of the Star Trek franchise as a whole 1 It was novelized by Steven Barnes 2 Contents 1 Plot 2 Production 2 1 Conception 2 2 Design 2 3 Filming and makeup 3 Reception 3 1 Academic 4 Home media 5 References 5 1 Sources 6 External linksPlot EditThis article s plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Distraught by the death of a friend in the Dominion War Captain Benjamin Sisko contemplates leaving Starfleet He begins experiencing hallucinations of 20th century New York City and is suddenly taken over by his vision becoming Benny Russell an African American science fiction writer in 1953 who is not conscious of his life in the 24th century Russell encounters people who bear the likeness of people from Sisko s life on Deep Space Nine such as a newsstand vendor who resembles his son s friend Nog His fellow writers for the magazine Incredible Tales include Albert Macklin Miles O Brien the short tempered left wing Herbert Rossoff Quark and married couple Kay Eaton Kira Nerys and Julius Eaton Julian Bashir The magazine s illustrator Roy Ritterhouse Martok shows them sketches to be used in an upcoming issue Russell is drawn to one of a space station resembling Deep Space Nine and offers to write the story for it Magazine editor Douglas Pabst Odo tells Kay who writes under a gender neutral name and Russell they are to be excluded from upcoming staff photos as the magazine s readers might object to a woman and a Negro as science fiction writers That night Russell is harassed by two white police officers Ryan Dukat and Mulkahey Weyoun He encounters a street preacher Joseph Sisko who seems to be speaking directly to him imploring him to write those words in the name of the Prophets Russell goes home and begins to write Some time later he finishes his story Deep Space Nine about the black captain of a space station His girlfriend Cassie Kasidy Yates doubts his ability to earn a living as a writer but is faithful to him despite flirtation from baseball player Willie Hawkins Worf A young hustler Jimmy Jake Sisko laughs at Russell s idea of colored people on the Moon At the magazine the entire staff loves his story including Pabst s secretary Darlene Kursky Jadzia Dax however Pabst refuses to print it on the grounds that the readers won t like a story with a black protagonist But Russell keeps writing sequels to the story and Macklin proposes a compromise frame the story as just a dream which Pabst reluctantly agrees to While Russell and Cassie are out celebrating Jimmy is shot and killed by officers Ryan and Mulkahey When Russell protests they beat him savagely On his first day back at the office weeks later Russell is eager to see his story in print Pabst arrives empty handed the owner has pulped this month s issue rather than publish a story featuring a black hero and Russell is fired Russell breaks down screaming that they cannot destroy his ideas and that the future he envisions is real As he is taken away by an ambulance the preacher appears next to him and tells him that he is both the dreamer and the dream Sisko wakes up back on the station He is deeply moved by his vision and wonders if somewhere far beyond the stars Benny Russell is really out there dreaming of them Production EditConception Edit Zicree who was not a regular writer for the series pitched the story with Jake Sisko as the main character and did not deal directly with racial issues He originally patterned the Bashir Kira characters on Henry Kuttner and C L Moore and the O Brien character on Isaac Asimov 3 This story was combined with ideas that story editor Robert Hewitt Wolfe had written for a script called Cold and Distant Stars a very early draft for the season 3 two part episode Past Tense The story suggested by Wolfe featured Sisko as a contemporary homeless man who believes he is a star base captain but who is diagnosed as schizophrenic and drugged to suppress his visions At that time producer Ira Steven Behr had rejected the hallucinatory element in favor of a time travel story because it felt too much like a gimmick 4 5 Researcher Allen Kwan wrote that the episode may have originally featured a more positive ending where instead of showing Benny hospitalized with a breakdown it would show him on a set producing an episode of Deep Space Nine that ending was reportedly not used for fears of breaking the continuity of the franchise 6 Design Edit The production crew included several references to past Star Trek series and episodes as well as other science fiction series For instance a memo from Pabst to Rossoff is visible in the office complaining to him that no one would believe that a cheerleader could kill vampires a reference to Shimerman s role as Principal Snyder on Buffy the Vampire Slayer 5 Much work was put into making the New York City presented look authentic Brooks who both directed the episode and played Sisko Russell went to great lengths to ensure period authenticity even during post production Brooks went to the music spotting session and had long discussions about things such as what music Russell would dance to and the style of the scoring The only other Star Trek director to attend a music spotting session was LeVar Burton when working on Star Trek The Next Generation Inequality was also portrayed through design the ambulance which carries Benny was portrayed as dirty and outdated because as Brooks notes that s what they would have sent 5 Filming and makeup Edit nbsp Avery Brooks both directed the episode and played Sisko Russell Brooks was chosen to direct by the production staff because they wanted a director who had personally experienced racism 5 The scene where Russell collapses and has a breakdown was perhaps more realistic than most fans had realized Once the assistant director called cut Brooks did not stop Brooks was so into the part that as Lou Race remarked even if he had stayed for half an hour Brooks would have kept on 7 The cast had little trouble separating their characters in this episode from the ones they normally played Ira Stephen Behr for instance had been concerned at how Rene Auberjonois might react to being the only main cast member to play a bad guy However Auberjonois loved the part and was delighted to play it Armin Shimerman Quark Rossoff agreed claiming that Rossoff is not an extension of Quark as Rossoff a communist was about as far from a Ferengi as you can get 5 Jeffrey Combs Weyoun Mulkahey had some trouble at first finding Weyoun in Mulkahey but realized that Mulkahey and Weyoun are both suppressing authority figures in Sisko s mind and played the character from that perspective With few science fiction elements one of the few special effects in the episode was a shot where a drawing of the space station falls out of Russell s hand and lands near the foot of a police officer The drawing was attached to a helium balloon which was connected to some monofilament on a fishing line and had to be yanked towards the foot of the officer and land at the right orientation for the camera Despite concerns that it could take hundreds of tries the shot was completed on the second attempt 5 Makeup was unusually easy for this episode since most characters appeared as humans only standard makeup was required Appearing out of costume was an unusual experience for many cast members Shimerman said that wearing the mask for Quark normally helped him avoid being nervous about how he looked on camera and that appearing without it was a very bizarre experience J G Hertzler had never appeared on Deep Space Nine out of Klingon makeup as Martok and enjoyed the role of Ritterhouse Hertzler draws as a hobby so when Ritterhouse was seen drawing in the episode the actor was really drawing the cast 5 Reception EditIn 2012 Den of Geek ranked this the fourth best episode of Star Trek Deep Space Nine praising the cast s performances and called it a treat to see the actors such as Michael Dorn and Rene Auberjonois without their alien makeup and prosthetics 8 The A V Club s Zack Handlen said that by escaping the trap of cloaking its concerns in pure symbol that some other Star Trek episodes fall into the episode ends up creating something unique 9 Empire ranked Far Beyond the Stars 4th out of the 50 top episodes of any show Star Trek as of 2016 They also said that seeing the cast out of makeup was an added bonus 10 A 2015 binge watching guide for Star Trek Deep Space Nine by Wired recommended not skipping this essential episode and said it is probably the best of the series 11 In 2019 Den of Geek included it among the top 12 best morality plays of the Star Trek franchise 12 The Chicago Tribune praised the episode for having the racism it showed be on Earth and not on some far flung planet They also argued the episode would shatter whatever remnants of that opposition to Avery Brook s casting which still linger 13 The Pittsburgh Post Gazette agreed and said fans will consider this the most remarkable episode in the history of Deep Space Nine and that once Lofton s character Jimmy says the N word a rare departure from the franchise s generally inoffensive language they knew they were not on Vulcan any more 14 U K science fiction magazine and website SciFiNow ranked this one of the top ten episodes of Star Trek Deep Space Nine in 2020 describing it as one of the series most powerful episodes and commending it for taking on racism 15 Academic Edit In a paper published by the Bulletin of Science Technology amp Society Allen Kwan argued that while the episode should be given credit for portraying racism more directly than any other episode the ending in which Russell is institutionalized weakens the moral of the story Parallels Kwan claimed can be drawn from Pabst the racist magazine editor to the producers of the Star Trek franchise Kwan maintains that like Pabst the franchise as a whole tends to ignore actual diversity instead opting to portray a future with only a single cultural and racial norm 6 Jan Johnson Smith has noted parallels between Sisko being the dreamer and the dream and Martin Luther King Jr s I Have a Dream speech 16 The storyline of the episode has been compared to a real life experience of African American science fiction author Samuel R Delany whose novel Nova was rejected by Analog magazine editor John W Campbell Jr in 1967 claiming it was because he didn t feel his readership would be able to relate to a black main character 17 Home media EditThis was one of the episodes included in the 2007 anthology DVD box set Star Trek Fan Collective Captain s Log the set also includes episodes from other series in the Star Trek franchise The other DS9 episodes included in the set were In the Pale Moonlight and What You Leave Behind and the episodes include an introduction by Avery Brooks Brooks chose this episode to be included in the set and an interview with him is also included 18 The full series of Deep Space Nine was released on DVD in 2003 and then re released in 2017 in a box set format 19 References Edit Ed Gross July 27 2016 The 50 best Star Trek episodes ever Empire Barnes Steven 1998 Star Trek Deep Space Nine Far Beyond the Stars New York City Pocket Books ISBN 978 0671024307 Nazzaro 1998 pp 42 46 Erdmann amp Block 2000 p 196 a b c d e f g Erdmann amp Block 2000 p 534 537 a b Kwan Allen February 1 2007 Seeking New Civilizations Race Normativity in the Star Trek Franchise Bulletin of Science Technology amp Society 27 1 59 70 doi 10 1177 0270467606295971 S2CID 144304868 What We Left Behind Looking Back at Star Trek Deep Space Nine Motion picture Shout Factory May 13 2019 Top 10 Star Trek Deep Space Nine episodes Den of Geek November 11 2012 Archived from the original on June 20 2021 Retrieved March 18 2021 Handlen Zack November 14 2013 Star Trek Deep Space Nine Far Beyond The Stars The A V Club Archived from the original on February 14 2020 Retrieved February 14 2020 The 50 best Star Trek episodes ever Empire July 27 2016 Retrieved July 2 2019 McMillan Graeme May 13 2015 Wired Binge Watching Guide Star Trek Deep Space Nine Wired ISSN 1059 1028 Retrieved July 23 2019 Star Trek s 12 Best Morality Plays Den of Geek January 8 2019 Retrieved July 3 2020 Johnson Allan February 10 1998 Back to the future Chicago Tribune p 59 Archived from the original on April 26 2020 Retrieved April 26 2020 via Newspapers com Norman Tony February 14 1998 Deep Space Nine episode boldly faces racism Pittsburgh Post Gazette p 29 Archived from the original on April 27 2020 Retrieved April 27 2020 via Newspapers com Deep Space Nine Top Ten Episodes SciFiNow December 31 2020 Retrieved June 8 2021 Johnson Smith 2005 p 84 Canavan Gerry 2014 Lavender Isiah III ed Black and Brown Planets The Politics of Race in Science Fiction Jackson MS University Press of Mississippi pp 49 51 Todd Douglass Jr August 5 2007 Star Trek Fan Collective Captain s Log DVD Talk TrekNews net Staff February 10 2017 REVIEW Deep Space Nine Complete Series DVD Box Set TrekNews net Retrieved February 19 2021 Sources Edit Nazzaro Joe June 1998 Going Far Beyond the Stars Star Trek Magazine London Titan Magazines pp 42 46 Erdmann Terry Block Paula 2000 The Star Trek Deep Space Nine Companion 1st ed New York City Pocket Books ISBN 978 0671501068 Johnson Smith Jan 2005 American science fiction TV Star Trek Stargate and beyond I B Tauris ISBN 978 1860648823 External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Far Beyond the Stars Far Beyond the Stars at IMDb nbsp Far Beyond the Stars at Memory Alpha Far Beyond the Stars at StarTrek com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Far Beyond the Stars amp oldid 1180813265, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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