You're right, and that's one of the reasons I really liked Grilka in The House of Quark. It is an episode which was unhappy about the state of things with Klingon women in the franchise and showed not only that women do have a strong role in Klingon society, but also that both Grilka and Quark are more useful than their societies appreciate. Grilka is not a sex object; Quark's advances are rebuffed and then dropped. It's not a perfect episode on its own, sadly. We needed more like it to really flesh this aspect of their culture out and engage with how TOS and TNG presented the women.clearspira wrote: ↑Sat Feb 13, 2021 9:37 pm The only TOS Klingon woman was a damsel (like all TOS women tended to be), then there is the one with the muscles in Star Trek 5 who proved that the original Sulu was very much not gay after he and Chekov sexually harassed her, then there is Chancellor Azetbur (I dunno how to spell it) who apparently did such a bad job that the council ended up MORE sexist after she left it, and now we have these women - who are thirsty for Riker. That's it.
Klingon women have a terrible run in Star Trek. Most of them are there to be sex objects - even the Duras sisters. What could have been a great plot about sexism (again, well done Azetbur) really was not helped by the cleavage armour. (Great idea btw, wearing armour with huge gaps over the heart among a race known for fighting with bladed weapons).
Another that comes to mind is Martok's wife, Sirella. She's not far from a shrew stereotype, but her conflict is mostly with Dax and engaging with those social expectations, too. More often than not, DS9 looked at what the other shows did and decided to build upon it and examine it instead of taking it for granted and perpetuating poor/simplistic choices made previously.
That's a good sign though, like an artist looking back on their art and seeing it's better now than it was in the past. If we looked back at TNG and said, "wow, I wish things were this good" all around, we'd be in trouble. It means we've progressed. Nothing's perfect, even our visions of Utopia. The fact that TNG now seems conservative is a normal process of the passage of time in an even slightly-progressive society.clearspira wrote: ↑Sat Feb 13, 2021 9:37 pm Its stuff like this that I think makes Star Trek a bit hard to defend nowadays as this ''great liberal utopia''. By modern standards its right wing as hell in many places tbh.