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The significance of composition in supplementing extratextual narrative: a topical cue analysis of Star Trek: discovery to provide narrative meaning within instrumentation

This dissertation is an exploration of the latest instalment of the Star Trek franchise, Star Trek: Discovery. In its most rudimentary form, this is a study of the characteristics of the soundtrack, but intrinsically, it is an investigation into the extratextual narratives which the music conveys –...

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Main Author: Forbes, Aidan Jarod
Other Authors: Ndodana, Bongani
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: College of Music 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Forbes, Aidan Jarod
author2 Ndodana, Bongani
author_browse Forbes, Aidan Jarod
Ndodana, Bongani
author_facet Ndodana, Bongani
Forbes, Aidan Jarod
author_sort Forbes, Aidan Jarod
collection Thesis
description This dissertation is an exploration of the latest instalment of the Star Trek franchise, Star Trek: Discovery. In its most rudimentary form, this is a study of the characteristics of the soundtrack, but intrinsically, it is an investigation into the extratextual narratives which the music conveys – the story the music tells – through its musical design. In a great sense, the narrative bases itself on the “Star Trek vision” which perpetuates progressive ideals, at times obstinately against the grain. The vision promises a future and critiques a present, and centres itself around theories of utopianism in various incarnations, from assertions of racial equality through the allusion to Afro-futurism in the racially volatile mid-century, to the hyper-representation of queer identities during a time of ideological turbulence in the American landscape of the late 2010s. Empowerment and idealism-to-a-fault have always permeated throughout the Star Trek vision. The music arguably shares this. This dissertation will explore these themes of idealism and utopianism, in contexts of heroism and romance, by considerations of the musical cues in applicable narrative moments, through harmony, melody, and instrumentation. Existing analyses of the Star Trek musical corpus are sparse, and the field of academia that concerns itself with Star Trek rarely ventures into musicology and music theory. Individual theses and journal articles can be identified, of which only a handful align with this study's analytical methodology, and even fewer with the focus area of Discovery. While concern of this scarcity is valid, the sparse research field contributes to a more creative research approach and methodology. While semiosis is a core figure in the research, other methodological paradigms such as spectromorphology are referenced. Linguistic and morphological notions are key in the ultimate methodology of the analysis. A model of analysis synergises various semiotic and typographic methodologies, with the non- technological aspects of spectromorphology – that is, an approach that designs its assertions around aural observation rather than pure pictographic interpretation. Tomaszewski, seminalsemiotic film music theoretician's approaches, the approaches of analysts Metz, the theories behind Smalley's analyses, and the writings of Getman, all come together to inform the design of this study's methodology. Within this study, Star Trek: Discovery (2017-2024) will be analysed and an investigation into the nonverbal linguistics of the instalment will require, at times, references to earlier instalments to ultimately ascertain not only meaning but a definitive sense of evolution or divergence within the soundtrack. Discovery is the flagship series of the fourth wave of television media in the Star Trek franchise – the first wave was the genesis series, Star Trek: The Original Series (1966-1969); the second wave was the exodus, expanding the Star Trek universe with multiple new series, Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-1994) the progenitor and the central narrative of this era of Star Trek; the third wave consisted of one series, Star Trek: Enterprise (2001-2005). Discovery lay the groundwork for a new generation of Star Trek, modernly situated and trailblazing notions beyond the Star Trek vision. Its music, in its divergent style and nature, assures this novel progression.
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language English
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42270 The significance of composition in supplementing extratextual narrative: a topical cue analysis of Star Trek: discovery to provide narrative meaning within instrumentation Forbes, Aidan Jarod Ndodana, Bongani Star Trek This dissertation is an exploration of the latest instalment of the Star Trek franchise, Star Trek: Discovery. In its most rudimentary form, this is a study of the characteristics of the soundtrack, but intrinsically, it is an investigation into the extratextual narratives which the music conveys – the story the music tells – through its musical design. In a great sense, the narrative bases itself on the “Star Trek vision” which perpetuates progressive ideals, at times obstinately against the grain. The vision promises a future and critiques a present, and centres itself around theories of utopianism in various incarnations, from assertions of racial equality through the allusion to Afro-futurism in the racially volatile mid-century, to the hyper-representation of queer identities during a time of ideological turbulence in the American landscape of the late 2010s. Empowerment and idealism-to-a-fault have always permeated throughout the Star Trek vision. The music arguably shares this. This dissertation will explore these themes of idealism and utopianism, in contexts of heroism and romance, by considerations of the musical cues in applicable narrative moments, through harmony, melody, and instrumentation. Existing analyses of the Star Trek musical corpus are sparse, and the field of academia that concerns itself with Star Trek rarely ventures into musicology and music theory. Individual theses and journal articles can be identified, of which only a handful align with this study's analytical methodology, and even fewer with the focus area of Discovery. While concern of this scarcity is valid, the sparse research field contributes to a more creative research approach and methodology. While semiosis is a core figure in the research, other methodological paradigms such as spectromorphology are referenced. Linguistic and morphological notions are key in the ultimate methodology of the analysis. A model of analysis synergises various semiotic and typographic methodologies, with the non- technological aspects of spectromorphology – that is, an approach that designs its assertions around aural observation rather than pure pictographic interpretation. Tomaszewski, seminalsemiotic film music theoretician's approaches, the approaches of analysts Metz, the theories behind Smalley's analyses, and the writings of Getman, all come together to inform the design of this study's methodology. Within this study, Star Trek: Discovery (2017-2024) will be analysed and an investigation into the nonverbal linguistics of the instalment will require, at times, references to earlier instalments to ultimately ascertain not only meaning but a definitive sense of evolution or divergence within the soundtrack. Discovery is the flagship series of the fourth wave of television media in the Star Trek franchise – the first wave was the genesis series, Star Trek: The Original Series (1966-1969); the second wave was the exodus, expanding the Star Trek universe with multiple new series, Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-1994) the progenitor and the central narrative of this era of Star Trek; the third wave consisted of one series, Star Trek: Enterprise (2001-2005). Discovery lay the groundwork for a new generation of Star Trek, modernly situated and trailblazing notions beyond the Star Trek vision. Its music, in its divergent style and nature, assures this novel progression. 2025-11-19T08:09:34Z 2025-11-19T08:09:34Z 2025 2025-11-19T08:05:51Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42270 en eng application/pdf College of Music Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Star Trek
Forbes, Aidan Jarod
The significance of composition in supplementing extratextual narrative: a topical cue analysis of Star Trek: discovery to provide narrative meaning within instrumentation
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The significance of composition in supplementing extratextual narrative: a topical cue analysis of Star Trek: discovery to provide narrative meaning within instrumentation
title_full The significance of composition in supplementing extratextual narrative: a topical cue analysis of Star Trek: discovery to provide narrative meaning within instrumentation
title_fullStr The significance of composition in supplementing extratextual narrative: a topical cue analysis of Star Trek: discovery to provide narrative meaning within instrumentation
title_full_unstemmed The significance of composition in supplementing extratextual narrative: a topical cue analysis of Star Trek: discovery to provide narrative meaning within instrumentation
title_short The significance of composition in supplementing extratextual narrative: a topical cue analysis of Star Trek: discovery to provide narrative meaning within instrumentation
title_sort significance of composition in supplementing extratextual narrative a topical cue analysis of star trek discovery to provide narrative meaning within instrumentation
topic Star Trek
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42270
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AT forbesaidanjarod significanceofcompositioninsupplementingextratextualnarrativeatopicalcueanalysisofstartrekdiscoverytoprovidenarrativemeaningwithininstrumentation