🐱 Here's Why the Non-Binary Alien Trope is Problematic

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With the rise of sci-fi shows that promote the LGBTQ+ community in recent years, like Steven Universe and She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, more audiences have been educated on characters -- and, in extension, real-life people -- who don't fit the stereotypical cisgender heterosexual mold. These shows have given younger audiences their first positive representation of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people. While this is definitely something that should be celebrated, these new sci-fi shows have been following a problematic trope with their non-binary characters.

The non-binary alien trope is problematic towards real-life non-binary people because it dehumanizes them and suggests that the only way a person could be non-binary is if they are non-human. This is often shown in sci-fi TV shows and movies through characters from planets with vastly different cultures to Western audiences: aliens who have shapeshifting abilities and robots who physically have no sex and don't understand the concept of gender. While there isn't anything inherently wrong with including these types of characters in sci-fi media, if they're the only non-binary representation in the entire show or movie, then they aren't representing the non-binary community correctly and are playing into the non-human non-binary trope.

Steven Universe is the first modern sci-fi show that has been accused of this. Although Steven Universe is a great show and definitely deserves all the praise it has received over the past few years, its representation of the non-binary community isn't the best. The first non-binary character audiences saw in Steven Universe was Stevonnie, a fusion of Steven and Connie. Because Stevonnie is a fusion of a male child and a female child, the other characters in the show use they/them pronouns for them. A PSA released on Cartoon Network's Instagram account in 2019 also briefly shows that the character identifies as non-binary and intersex.

However, Stevonnie isn't human. Steven is half-gem, because he is the child of Greg Universe -- a human -- and Pink Diamond. This means that Stevonnie is technically one-quarter-gem, because Connie is fully human. Stevonnie also couldn't exist if Steven wasn't half-gem, because the humans in Steven Universe don't have the fusing powers that the gems do. The gems in Steven Universe are from Homeworld, a different planet ruled by the four Diamonds, who essentially act as galactic dictators. Therefore, it's safe to say that the gems are aliens.

Stevonnie definitely isn't the only example of this trope in Steven Universe. Any gem fusion with Steven is considered to be non-binary, because all of the single gems identify as female. This means that the majority of the non-binary characters that are in Steven Universe fall into the non-human non-binary trope. The only non-binary Steven Universe character who doesn't fall into this trope is Shep, Sadie's partner from Steven Universe Future. However, a lot of fans didn't watch Steven Universe Future because it was mostly created to address concerns that audiences had about the original five seasons of Steven Universe, and Steven Universe Season 5 Episode 29, "Change Your Mind" felt like a more fitting ending to the show.

She-Ra and the Princesses of Power also falls into this trope. The only canonically non-binary character in She-Ra is Double Trouble, a shapeshifting alien. None of the characters in She-Ra are human, as the main troupe comes from Etheria, which is a fictional alien planet. While Double Trouble's species and homeworld is unknown, it is safe to say that they fall into the non-binary alien trope because all of the characters in She-Ra are technically aliens. It could be argued that this is better representation than Steven Universe's non-binary characters because Double Trouble could theoretically also be from Etheria and there aren't any human characters in She-Ra anyway -- however, it is still clear that Double Trouble falls into this trope.

The non-human non-binary trope even goes as far back as the 1990s in Star Trek: The Next Generation. In Season 5, Episode 2, "The Outcast," Riker finds a member of the J'nali race who identifies as female. This is considered a crime in her society because the J'nali are an androgynous race. While this does provide interesting commentary on gender identity and coming out, it still falls into the non-human non-binary trope because the J'nali race are aliens.

However, it is worth noting that Star Trek has taken steps to include better non-binary representation in Star Trek: Discovery. Adira Tal is a non-binary character played by a non-binary actor. Even though they obtain a symbiont from their Trill boyfriend Gray, they are still canonically human. Adira may be the first example of a human non-binary character in a well-known modern sci-fi TV show.

These examples show that the sci-fi genre still has a long way to go when it comes to non-binary representation. While the amount of non-human non-binary characters in comparison to human non-binary characters in the genre is disheartening, there definitely is still a light at the end of the tunnel. The inclusion of human non-binary characters like Adira and Shep shows that sci-fi showrunners are aware of the problematic trope and are taking actions to counteract it. As long as there are more human non-binary characters in upcoming sci-fi media, the future of non-binary representation appears to be bright.
 
The author doesn't understand allegories and the science-fiction genre in general. Science-fiction is about using your imagination to create new worlds, new species, etc to tell a compelling story. Aliens shouldn't be male and/or female, what if they have no sex and just reproduce by making clones of themselves? What about a species that reproduces by spreading some kind of pollen that modifies the DNA of another species? Expecting every non-Earth species to be male and female clearly shows that the author is narrow-minded. The science-fiction genre is not for self-centered troons.

>author shits on TNG and praises STD
Fuck off.
 
You posted twice in this thread, 3 minutes apart. Eamon's building video is 1 minute, 21 seconds long and even if you combined that with the Steven Universe PSA that's 1 minute, 26 seconds long, it adds up to 2 minutes, 47 seconds total runtime. In the time it took you to complain about not having time, you could have watched both videos and had 13 seconds of free time to spare. You didn't want to see Eamon's videos, you had the time.
Oh no, the building doesn't sleep.
But i get the point.
 
The Steven Universe gems are only nominally non-binary in the same way that robot characters are non-binary, in that literally speaking, they do not have a sex.

For all intents and purposes though, they are clearly intended be be read as female and act like women. They are about as non-binary as fucking C-3PO.
 
The non-binary alien trope is problematic towards real-life non-binary people because it dehumanizes them and suggests that the only way a person could be non-binary is if they are non-human.
Humans are literally a binary species. Its how our species works. If there are aliens, they might be the same or they might have some other method of reproduction from us but in neither case does that change the fact that humans are binary. So the statement the only way a person could be non binary is if they are non human is factually correct, literally by definition
 
The Steven Universe gems are only nominally non-binary in the same way that robot characters are non-binary, in that literally speaking, they do not have a sex.

For all intents and purposes though, they are clearly intended be be read as female and act like women. They are about as non-binary as fucking C-3PO.
The creator claims to be enby but still goes by she/her. I think she might be an idiot.
 
What even is Steven Universe? I've heard of it but I have no clue what it's about.

It's some woke lesbian named Rebecca Sugar's lazy shitty cartoon show for kids where lesbianism is recontextualized as 'fuseing' in order to bypass censors and indoctrinate children into globohomo BS.

E;R can explain better than I ever could:
 
Nonbinary doesn't exist. Aliens don't exist. Combining two things that don't exist for fictional stories makes perfect sense.

What even is Steven Universe? I've heard of it but I have no clue what it's about.
Tumblr the cartoon. Full stop. Lays out the groundwork for something new and interesting and just builds feelings and boring shit on top of it. The creator tried so hard to make everybody likeable and redeemed while also making everybody selfish idiots who should've been dead by stupid long ago (except Greg though, Greg deserved better).

Remember when Garnet said to Stevonnie, "You are an Experience"? I was more impressed on Connie taking part of Gem culture. Insted of as a symbol of Steven and Connie's bond, it became a political tool. Congrats on tainting that faggot shit and tainting the battle fusion concept.
Would Stevonnie still count as nonbinary now? Becky used Stevonnie as a mascot for intersex support (hermaphrodite) which means all of Steven's fusions have his manhood attached to them. Creepy shit.
 
You posted twice in this thread, 3 minutes apart. Eamon's building video is 1 minute, 21 seconds long and even if you combined that with the Steven Universe PSA that's 1 minute, 26 seconds long, it adds up to 2 minutes, 47 seconds total runtime. In the time it took you to complain about not having time, you could have watched both videos and had 13 seconds of free time to spare. You didn't want to see Eamon's videos, you had the time.
 
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However, Stevonnie isn't human. Steven is half-gem, because he is the child of Greg Universe -- a human -- and Pink Diamond. This means that Stevonnie is technically one-quarter-gem, because Connie is fully human.

The one drop rule is racist. Therefore this is a problematic statement. :mad:
 
The Steven Universe gems are only nominally non-binary in the same way that robot characters are non-binary, in that literally speaking, they do not have a sex.

For all intents and purposes though, they are clearly intended be be read as female and act like women. They are about as non-binary as fucking C-3PO.
It goes without saying that the writer is an idiot, but it seems like in addition to that, they don't understand what non-binary means. I have only the faintest of knowledge of Steven Universe so maybe in the show it's better explained, but in the article it even mentions that the fusion of Steven and the girl is intersex and non-binary, but I'm pretty sure those are different things.

In sci-fi specifically, aliens are usually non-binary in the sense that their species has even more (or sometimes less) genders, because it doesn't make sense that every alien is modeled after humans. It's like how in a lot of sci-fi shows, all the characters are technically speaking different languages because why would a race from the other side of the galaxy speak English, but because of universal translators, the audience all hears it as English. And then sometimes this is used as a plot point, where a new alien race is discovered and they can't communicate and that's the obstacle to overcome in the plot.

I know in some cases, an alien character might mention that their species actually has like 17 genders or whatever, but humans wouldn't understand. Or there's symbiotic races that don't have genders at all. Again, for audience sake, the aliens typically adhere to earth standards to keep things simple. I think it's especially common with robot/android characters that generally just go with whatever the humans are comfortable using aka, whatever the actor actually is. Data is a guy because he's played by a guy. Bender is a guy because he's voiced by a guy. In Red Dwarf, the computer is played by a male actor in the first few seasons, but then the actor leaves and gets replaced with a female so now it's a girl and I believe the explanation was literally they uploaded a new program.

These are also tropes from way before gender identity was being debated in the first place. I actually saw something the other day talking about how, if you look at a certain way, the trill in Deep Space Nine could be a trans allegory because it's had both male and female hosts and can pick whatever gender it wants. But I can almost guarantee gender identity had absolutely nothing to do with it and it was just a neat sci-fi idea. Said series also has shapeshifter characters who would presumably have no gender because they pick their form, but again, it defaults to the gender of the actor. Odo was a guy because he was played by a male actor, the enemy shapeshifter person was a girl because female actress.
 
I'd argue that to be non-binary is to fundamentally be non-human, at least somewhat. Sex is something that defines us and to deny it is to deny one's own humanity.
Couldn't put it better myself.

Poor black people and LGBTQWTFBBQ people, they’re so fucking fragile
And they love to say "white fragility" or "straight fragility" when all you need to do to break these queer losers to use words. If you do speak against them, they literally act like babies and cry till mummy government comforts them and punishes fully functional adults.

I have genderless OCs since before 2010 but thanks to modern ideals, I'll never reveal who they are and I have to keep their traits a secret instead of expressing my ideas of a genderless being.
 
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