June 2025

S M T W T F S
1 2 345 67
89 10 1112 1314
15 16171819 2021
22232425262728
2930     

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Tuesday, February 19th, 2008 04:57 pm
It's rather interesting how polarizing this episode is for Teyla fans.

There seems to be largely two opinions held by the fandom on this episode:
  1. It was an awesome episode for Teyla, where she overpowers a Wraith Queen and saves her team-mates, while still fighting and protecting her child.
  2. It was a dreadful episode for Teyla, where pregnant = helpless and needing to be told what a pregnant woman can/cannot do.
I'm primarily of the 1st group, although I understand the reaction to #2 as well. That was part of my reaction - and still is.

My rundown of Spoils:

In military terms, John is quite within his rights to say that he won't have Teyla on his team. He's the commander, it's his decision. In personal terms, he was a bit of a bastard about it - which Teyla called him on in the mess hall scene. He ate his slice of humble pie, and then had to swallow when they discovered Teyla could fly the ship.

Military terms don't apply to Teyla since she's neither of the military, nor of the expedition. It may have been suggested or implied that she should inform the team of any change in her condition, but they can't force her to do so in any meaningful way without being really stupid about it. "If you don't tell us you're pregnant, we're going to sever contact with you and not help you find your people" has all the maturity of a five year-old throwing a temper tanty.

In personal terms, Teyla was well within her right and reason to keep quiet about her pregnancy. Given the status of her people and her need to find them, I think that she would balance up the need for John to know vs. her need to be out there, and make the call her way. I think Teyla was justified in wanting to keep going out on missions - in the 'jumper scene on their way to the hiveship, she more or less tells John that she can't stay cooped up or she'll go mad.

I understand that.

It did irk a little that the ending had a "John was sooooo right!" angle - one which certain portions of the fandom seemed to pick up and run with as "See? Teyla was WRONG WRONG WRONG to hide her pregnancy and want to be on the team!"

However, as a hardcore Teyla-fan where the secondary characters of interest are John and Ronon and only really if Teyla's there, too, I'm considerably more used to getting the bad as well as the good when it comes to Teyla; it's lowered my expectations of what TPTB will do with her. There is no episode in all of 80+ where Teyla's concerns are central to the plot, where her actions are central to the resolution, and her judgement is considered to be the right and correct way to go.

Considering that Spoils Of War got 2 out of 3, I'm cheering for all I'm worth.

In the end, I look at Teyla's decision to cease going out on dangerous missions like this: It was her decision.

At the point where they're on the balcony, it's Teyla who makes the choice to leave. Granted, John took her off the team at the start of the mission, but he brought her back on once it was seen she was needed. Would he have taken her off again? Maybe. Probably. But she has already decided she's not going to go back on missions for her son's sake. For her son's sake, not because John told her she couldn't. He might have made the call that ultimately prevailed, but Teyla chose it in the end.

Maybe it's sophistry; maybe I'm just not enough of a 'feminist' to be enraged about it. I understand the frustration at the implication that a pregnant woman needed to be told what she could and could not do by a man; I just think there are other angles at work here, and it's not the be-all and end-all of the way to interpret it.

Could TPTB do better? Yes. They could. But they haven't. C'est la vie.
Thursday, February 21st, 2008 06:22 am (UTC)
I just watched this episode last night and it really bothered me on several levels. I'm sure my husband is tired of my rambling. Your meta came just in time. So, in random order:

Perhaps because I've just watched LOST S2, I am so tired of "parents sacrificing everything/everyone else because of their children" plot devices. Teyla whining about the wraith queen attacking her child and relenting at the end was so disappointing. Maybe that attitude *is* true in Real Life, but as my mother would say, "I live it, why do I have to watch it?"

Sheppard is what he is: uncomfortable with emotional situations, particularly with women. Over and over again we've seen him flinch as a woman throws her arms around him. Those S1 days -courting- ascended women are long gone. He doesn't know how to deal with Teyla's reveal and so he just lashes out with the only rhetoric he knows. I don't think his behavior was meant to be chauvinistic for its own sake and I certainly don't think Flanigan played it that way. As for an apology at the end? Well, he believes he did the right thing even though he is still grateful to Teyla for saving their butts. His slightly anxious "get her phone number" bit towards the end struck me a come-on he did because he knew he *should* and he seemed very uncomfortable about it. Maybe I just have slash goggles on that.

Hey, how come every female character in this episode was wearing spray-on low cut tops> Plenty of cleavage to go around (no pun intended). Forget Carter trying to zip up that jacket. How about that sweet little maroon lace top Teyla wore in the mess? And that bounty hunter lady (forgot her name)? She's the leader of their group and she's wearing something off-the-shoulder that looks like it might fall of altogether? The wraith queen's bodice made me really nervous whenever she would bend over Sheppard! Finally, Elizabeth in leather. Yes. So, if anything sends a chauvinist message to me, those wardrobe choices do.

Yeah, TPTB could and should do better. I want Teyla to be choice #1, but I don't want her to spend the rest of the season complaining about some threat to her baby's life.