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{{short description|Star Trek character}}
{{short description|Star Trek character}}
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{{DISPLAYTITLE:Kes (''Star Trek'')}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:Kes (''Star Trek'')}}
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| series = [[Star Trek]]
| series = [[Star Trek]]
| image = KesProfileImage.jpg
| image = KesProfileImage.jpg
| alt = Jennifer Lien pictured in costume as Kes for a promotional shoot
| alt = A photograph of a young woman with short blonde hair wearing a maroon outfit, with a Star Trek pin attached.
| caption = Jennifer Lien as Kes
| caption = Jennifer Lien as Kes
| first = "[[Caretaker (Star Trek: Voyager)|Caretaker]]" (1995)
| first = "[[Caretaker (Star Trek: Voyager)|Caretaker]]" (1995)
Line 14: Line 14:
| species = Ocampa
| species = Ocampa
| affiliation = [[Starfleet]]
| affiliation = [[Starfleet]]
| family = Benaren (father)<br />Martis (mother)
| family = {{Plainlist|
*Benaren (father)
*Martis (mother)
}}
| children = Childless (canon timeline)<br />Linnis (alternate timeline)
| children = {{Plainlist|
*None (canon timeline)
*Linnis (alternate timeline)
}}
| lbl23 = Posting
| lbl23 = Posting
| data23 = [[USS Voyager (Star Trek)|USS ''Voyager'']] (field posting).
| data23 = [[USS Voyager (Star Trek)|USS ''Voyager'']] (field posting)
| lbl24 = Position
| lbl24 = Position
| data24 = Medical assistant, aeroponics gardener.
| data24 = {{Plainlist|
* [[Medical assistant]]
* [[Hydroponics]] gardener
}}
| lbl31 = [[Star Trek uniforms|Rank]]
| lbl31 = [[Star Trek uniforms|Rank]]
| data31 = Unassigned rank.
| data31 = Unassigned rank
| lbl32 = Partner
| lbl32 = Partner
| data32 = [[Neelix]] (formerly)<br />Tom Paris (alternate timeline)
| data32 = {{Plainlist|
* [[Neelix]] (formerly)
* [[Tom Paris]] (alternate timeline)
}}
}}
}}


'''Kes''' is a fictional character on the American [[science fiction]] television show ''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]''. She is portrayed by actress [[Jennifer Lien]]. Set in the 24th century of the ''[[Star Trek]]'' universe, the series follows the crew of the starship [[USS Voyager (Star Trek)|USS ''Voyager'']], stranded far from home and struggling to get back to Earth. Kes is a member of the Ocampa (a [[telepathy|telepathic]] alien species with an average life expectancy of nine years) who joins the crew in the series' premiere episode along with her Talaxian boyfriend, [[Neelix]]. She subsequently works as [[The Doctor (Star Trek: Voyager)|the Doctor]]'s medical assistant and develops her mental abilities with [[Tuvok]]'s assistance.
'''Kes''' is a fictional character played by [[Jennifer Lien]] on the American [[science fiction]] television show ''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]''. She is a member of a [[Telepathy|telepathic]] alien species known as the Ocampa who have latent psychic abilities and a life span of only nine years. Joining the starship [[USS Voyager (Star Trek)|USS ''Voyager'']]'s crew in the pilot episode "[[Caretaker (Star Trek: Voyager)|Caretaker]]", she opens a [[hydroponics]] garden and works as the [[medical assistant]] to a [[Holography|hologram]] known as [[The Doctor (Star Trek: Voyager)|the Doctor]]. Her storylines focus on encouraging the Doctor to develop his humanity and dealing with her Talaxian boyfriend [[Neelix]]'s jealousy. She also seeks to expand upon her mental capabilities, leaving in the [[Star Trek: Voyager season 4|fourth season]] after her powers threaten to destroy the ship. She reappears in a [[Star Trek: Voyager season 6|season six]] episode and features in [[List of Star Trek: Voyager novels|''Star Trek: Voyager'' novels and short stories]].


''Voyager''{{'}}s creators [[Rick Berman]], [[Michael Piller]], and [[Jeri Taylor]] designed Kes to be a rapidly-aging character who would provide audiences with a different perspective on time. Although Kes is portrayed as fragile and innocent, she is also shown as having a hidden strength and maturity. ''Voyager''{{'}}s producers reluctantly fired Lien after her personal issues affected her reliability on set. At the time, this was not openly discussed and various other reasons were attributed to her departure; these ranged from Lien voluntarily leaving to pursue other roles to her being removed to make room for [[Jeri Ryan]]'s introduction as [[Seven of Nine]].
Kes' storylines focus on her relationships with Neelix, the Doctor, Tuvok, [[Tom Paris]], and [[Kathryn Janeway|Captain Janeway]]. Her psionic powers are also central and secondary themes of some episodes. Lien was removed from the series in the [[Star Trek: Voyager (season 4)|fourth season]], but reprised her role in a [[Star Trek: Voyager (season 6)|season six]] episode, "[[Fury (Star Trek: Voyager)|Fury]]". Kes has been featured in [[Star Trek canon|non-canon]] [[List of Star Trek novels|novels and short stories]] adapted from the show.


Some critics praised Lien's removal from ''Voyager'', criticizing Kes as boring and without a clear purpose, while others were more disappointed by this casting change. Kes's age was discussed by reviewers who felt she was too young to be dating Neelix. Her return in the season six episode "[[Fury (Star Trek: Voyager)|Fury]]" was criticized as one of the worst moments in the ''[[Star Trek]]'' franchise. Academics have analyzed Kes based on her representation of femininity, particularly in the context of the [[1990s]], as well as the development of her mental abilities.
Critical response to Kes was mostly negative, though some critics praised Lien's performance. Although Kes' relationship with Neelix was panned, critics had a more mixed reaction to her friendships with Tuvok and Tom Paris. Kes' relationships with members of ''Voyager's'' crew and her psionic powers attracted attention from academics.


== Development ==
== Development ==


=== Creation and casting ===
=== Creation and casting ===
Early development of ''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'', including the Ocampa, began in July 1993. Producers imagined the Ocampa as an [[Androgyny|androgynous]] alien species. In later meetings, they agreed on the idea of the Ocampa having a short lifespan, similar to a [[mayfly]]. Kes was intended to live for only seven years, and changes in her appearance were planned for each season, emphasizing her age progression.<ref name="Book11">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Poe1998|Poe (1998)]]: pp. 175–177</ref> The androgyny concept was dropped, as the first cast description identified Kes, who was initially named ''Dah'', as a female.<ref name="Book4">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Poe1998|Poe (1998)]]: p. 208</ref> Producers proposed a second Ocampa, shown near the end of his lifespan, as part of the main cast, though this idea was abandoned in favor of [[Neelix]], who was a late addition to the series.<ref name="Book11" /> Kes was initially created as a [[Reconnaissance|scout]] for ''[[USS Voyager (Star Trek)|Voyager]]''{{'s}} journey through the [[Delta Quadrant]],<ref name="Book11" /> before Neelix assumed the role instead.<ref name="Book4" /> Kes was then reimagined as a [[medical intern]].<ref name="Book4" /> In an August 1993 memo, series creator [[Jeri Taylor]] suggested Kes have a [[Superhuman abilities|superhuman ability]] and be caught in a war between two factions.<ref name="Book12">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Poe1998|Poe (1998)]]: p. 189</ref><ref name="Book13">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Poe1998|Poe (1998)]]: p. 191</ref> Producers debated the nature of the character's [[Psionics|psionic powers]], leading them to ask production associate Zayra Cabot and the Joan Pearce Research Associates to gather information on [[parapsychology]].<ref name="AdditionalBookSource1">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Poe1998|Poe (1998)]]: p. 199</ref> They later agreed to portray Kes with "some measure of telepathic ability" for the pilot episode ("[[Caretaker (Star Trek: Voyager)|Caretaker]]"), and planned to address it further in future episodes.<ref name="AdditionalBookSource2">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Poe1998|Poe (1998)]]: p. 206</ref>
[[File:Star Trek Voyager costume - Kes.jpg|thumb|An image of one of Kes' costumes and her prosthetics|alt=]]


Kes was one of the first nine characters that ''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'' creators [[Rick Berman]], [[Michael Piller]], and [[Jeri Taylor]] developed for the crew of the [[USS Voyager (Star Trek)|USS ''Voyager'']] starship.{{sfn|Poe|1998|p=155}}{{sfn|Poe|1998|p=208}} Inspired by the ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]'' episode "[[The Child (Star Trek: The Next Generation)|The Child]]", Berman, Piller, and Taylor wanted to feature a rapidly-aging character to encourage viewers to reflect on time.{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=10}}{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=97}} Early in production, they nicknamed Kes [[Mayfly]] to reference how her alien species—the Ocampa—have a short life span.{{sfn|Poe|1998|pp=176{{endash}}177}}{{sfn|Poe|1998|p=199}} She was set to age a year at the midpoint each season to emphasize this rapid age progression.{{sfn|Poe|1998|p=189}} Early drafts had Kes named Dah and portrayed her with an older Ocampa near the end of his life cycle.{{sfn|Poe|1998|p=208}}{{sfn|Poe|1998|p=191}}
When casting Kes, "Caretaker" director [[Winrich Kolbe]] looked for an actress who was "fragile, but with a steely will underneath". The casting call was for only women in their early-twenties or younger.<ref name="Book1">[[Kes (Star Trek)#GrossAltman1995|Gross & Altman (1995)]]: p. 351</ref> Producers hired [[Jennifer Lien]] based on their belief that she could embody the character's "somewhat childlike and fragile" qualities.<ref name="Book8">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Poe1998|Poe (1998)]]: p. 273</ref> Lien was one of the first cast members hired for the series;<ref name="Book8" /> at the age of nineteen, she was the youngest actor on the show at the time of its debut.<ref name="Book8" /><ref name="Book5">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Poe1998|Poe (1998)]]: p. 99</ref> Lien only had a basic understanding of the ''[[Star Trek]]'' franchise prior to receiving the part.<ref name="Book8" /><ref name="Magazine1">{{cite magazine|last=Bassom|first=David|date=September 1996|title=Jennifer Lien|magazine=[[Star Trek Monthly]]|location=London|publisher=[[Titan Magazines]]|issue=19}}</ref> She said this allowed her to approach her performance without anxiety. She had auditioned for the show due to the opportunity to play a new alien species, and explained "it meant that anything could happen, offering me the chance to learn and grow as an actress".<ref name="Magazine1" /> [[Jennifer Gatti]] was considered as a runner-up for Kes,<ref name="Book22">[[Kes (Star Trek)#GrossAltman1996|Gross & Altman (1996)]]: p. 156</ref> and she would later [[guest star]] in the episode "[[Non Sequitur (Star Trek: Voyager)|Non Sequitur]]".<ref name="Book32">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Ruditis2003|Ruditis (2003)]]: p. 66</ref>


In initial character descriptions, Kes was listed as a potential [[Reconnaissance|scout]] and expert on [[gang]]s,{{sfn|Poe|1998|p=189}} but was changed to be a medical intern,{{sfn|Poe|1998|p=208}} and another character—[[Neelix]]—assumed a similar role as a guide.{{sfn|Poe|1998|p=134}} When Berman, Piller, and Taylor wrote Kes with [[psychic]] powers, [[production assistant]] Zayra Cabot hired a [[paranormal]]-focused [[consulting firm]], the Joan Pearce Research Associates, to help research [[parapsychology]].{{sfn|Poe|1998|p=199}} Based on these findings, Kes was shown with limited [[telepathy]] in the pilot episode ("[[Caretaker (Star Trek: Voyager)|Caretaker]]") with further exploration of her power planned for later episodes.{{sfn|Poe|1998|p=206}}
Series creator [[Michael Piller]] was concerned the pilot was too "passionless" due to its focus on an [[Action adventure film|action-adventure]] storyline over individual character development;<ref name="Book7">[[Kes (Star Trek)#GrossAltman1996|Gross & Altman (1996)]]: p. 134</ref><ref name="Book15">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Poe1998|Poe (1998)]]: p. 235</ref> he explained: "The biggest danger in the pilot was in creating a story that nobody cared about."<ref name="Book15" /> Part of Kes' role in the episode, for Piller, was to encourage the audience to care about Neelix.<ref name="Book7" /> The costumes in "Caretaker" were created by [[Robert Blackman]].<ref name="Book6">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Poe1998|Poe (1998)]]: p. 232</ref> He said designing Kes' clothing was a challenge since producers were still unclear about the character and Lien was very [[introverted]]. Although he had difficulty with Lien, Blackman said the cast and crew enjoyed working with her. Kes' original costume was [[Pastel (color)|pastel colored]] and based on a [[Sprite (folklore)|sprite]], but the producers rejected it after a wardrobe fitting.<ref name="Book9">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Poe1998|Poe (1998)]]: pp. 295–296</ref>


[[File:Jennifer Anne Lien, April 1996.jpg|thumb|right|[[Jennifer Lien]] (''pictured in 1996'') plays Kes.|alt=A photograph of Jennifer Lien]]
The Ocampa prosthetics for "Caretaker" were designed by [[Michael Westmore]].<ref name="Book6" /> While the early scenes of "Caretaker" were filmed, Lien tested various combinations of wigs and prosthetics; cinematographer [[Marvin V. Rush]] filmed each version for series creator [[Rick Berman]] to receive his final approval.<ref name="Book10">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Poe1998|Poe (1998)]]: p. 303</ref> During the show's first two seasons, it took Lien three hours a day to get into her character's hair, make-up, and wardrobe.<ref name="Magazine1" /> As the series progressed, Lien developed an allergic response to the ear prosthetics; starting with the episode "[[Before and After (Star Trek: Voyager)|Before and After]]", Lien no longer wore the ear prosthetics and Kes was portrayed with longer hair to cover her ears and hide this.<ref name="Source1">{{cite web|url=https://www.denofgeek.com/us/tv/star-trek/270646/10-great-backwards-tv-episodes|title=10 Great Backwards TV Episodes|last=Harrisson|first=Juliette|date=February 1, 2018|work=[[Den of Geek!]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180410022110/http://www.denofgeek.com/us/tv/star-trek/270646/10-great-backwards-tv-episodes|archive-date=April 10, 2018|df=mdy-all}}</ref>


Early in ''Voyager''{{'}}s development, it was undetermined if Kes would be female, male, or [[Androgyny|androgynous]].{{sfn|Poe|1998|pp=176{{endash}}177}} The later casting call was only for women in their early-twenties or younger. "Caretaker" director [[Winrich Kolbe]] wanted an actress who "could be fragile but with a steely will underneath".{{sfn|Gross|Altman|1995|p=351}} [[Jennifer Lien]] was an "early selection" for the role;{{sfn|Poe|1998|p=273}} Taylor said that she had "this wonderful [[Elf|elfin]] quality" and projected vulnerability and strength in her audition.{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=97}} Lien was unfamiliar with the ''[[Star Trek]]'' franchise, and at the age of nineteen, she was the youngest actor on the show at the time of its debut.{{sfn|Poe|1998|p=273}} Jennifer Gatti was considered as a runner-up for Kes, and would later [[guest star]] in the episode "[[Non Sequitur (Star Trek: Voyager)|Non Sequitur]]".{{sfn|Gross|Altman|1996|p=156}}
=== Characterization and relationships ===
The "Caretaker" script stated Kes was a "dazzling, ethereal beauty, waifish and fragile", with a "dignity – her bearing, an alertness in her look, that suggests a being of powerful intelligence".<ref name="Book222">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Ruditis2003|Ruditis (2003)]]: p. 146</ref> On the ''Star Trek'' official website, the character is identified as a "tough survivor and a bit of a rebel".<ref name="Source2">{{cite web|url=http://www.startrek.com/database_article/kes|title=Kes|publisher=[[StarTrek.com]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180612140828/http://www.startrek.com/database_article/kes|archive-date=June 12, 2018|df=mdy-all}}</ref> In a 1996 interview, Lien characterized Kes as "strong and curious and intelligent" despite still being "a child in a way with the same fears and inhibitions and worries that we all have".<ref name=":0">{{cite journal|last=Finch|first=Amanda|date=September 1996|title=Spotlight – Jennifer Lien|journal=SCI-FI Universe|volume=3|issue=1|pages=10}}</ref> She saw the character's lack of "cynicism or precociousness or pretentiousness or sarcasm" as different from typical young female roles.<ref name="SourceCommentary">{{cite interview|last=Lien|first=Jennifer|subject-link=Jennifer Lien|title=Cast Reflections: Season One|publisher=[[Paramount Television]]|date=February 24, 2004}}</ref> Although she found "this kind of diversity in a character" difficult to play,<ref name=":0" /> Lien enjoyed the process and said: "It's a joy to pretend to be this extraordinary creature, so open and everything so new."<ref name="SourceCommentary" />


For the pilot, [[Robert Blackman]] designed Kes's wardrobe and [[Michael Westmore]] created her [[prosthetic makeup]].{{sfn|Poe|1998|p=232}} Blackman had difficulty dressing Lien as ''Voyager''{{'}}s producers were unclear of her character's direction. His initial design was for a [[Pastel (color)|pastel-colored]] costume inspired by a [[Sprite (folklore)|sprite]], and after that was rejected, the final costume was instead partially inspired by [[Joan of Arc]].{{sfn|Poe|1998|pp=295{{endash}}296}} Kes's wardrobe primarily consisted of [[tunic]]s, and Lien wore a [[bob cut]] wig.{{sfn|Patel Jr.|2000}}{{sfn|DeCandido|2020}} Lien tested combinations of wigs and prosthetics, which cinematographer [[Marvin V. Rush]] filmed for Berman's final approval.{{sfn|Poe|1998|p=303}} Westmore kept the prosthetic simple to more easily work on 30 Ocampa characters in one episode.{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=200}} Lien said the ear prosthetics impaired her hearing,{{sfn|Patel Jr.|2000}} and she developed an allergic response to them as the series progressed.{{sfn|DeCandido|2020}}{{sfn|Harrisson|2018}} Starting with the episode "[[Before and After (Star Trek: Voyager)|Before and After]]", Lien no longer wore the prosthetics and used her longer hair to cover her ears and hide this change;{{sfn|DeCandido|2020}}{{sfn|Harrisson|2018}} around this point, her costume also transitioned to being tighter [[jumpsuit]]s.{{sfn|Lee|2020|pp=91{{endash}}92}}
Lien was not given information about her character's future storylines prior to receiving the final copies of the scripts. Unlike the show's other actors, she did not campaign for changes to her character, explaining "I felt my contribution was more in the acting, and not in the writing".<ref name="Magazine2">{{cite magazine|last1=Simpson|first1=Paul|last2=Thomas|first2=Ruth|date=March 2000|title=Kes & Tell|magazine=[[Star Trek Monthly]]|location=London|publisher=[[Titan Magazines]]|issue=76|pages=28–32}}</ref> She viewed Kes' developing mental abilities as representing "her confidence in being able to choose a path for her life", and identified temptation as a key part in her [[character arc]].<ref name="Magazine3">{{cite magazine|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|date=1996|title=Star Trek: Voyager|magazine=[[TV Zone]]|location=London|publisher=[[Visual Imagination]]|issue=23|page=21}}</ref> Author [[Paul Ruditis]] summed up Kes through the paradoxical phrase "fragile power".<ref name="Book222" />


=== Characterization and relationships ===
[[File:DawsonMulgrewLien1995.jpg|thumb|275px|A 1995 promotional image, featuring Lien (right) with her ''Star Trek: Voyager'' co-stars [[Kate Mulgrew]] (center) and [[Roxann Dawson]] (left)|alt=|left]]


In ''Voyager''{{'}}s [[Bible (screenwriting)|series bible]], Kes is characterized as "an innocent who sees humanity through a fresh perspective" and as "delicate, beautiful, young".{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=97}} The "Caretaker" script describes her as a "dazzling, ethereal beauty, [[Waif|waifish]] and fragile" who has a "dignity to her bearing, an alertness in her look, that suggests a being of powerful intelligence".{{sfn|Ruditis|2003|p=146}} While promoting ''Voyager'', Lien said that Kes lacked any "cynicism or precociousness or pretentiousness or sarcasm", and believed this separated her from the typical roles for young women.{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|pp=98{{endash}}99}} Taylor defined the character through her curiosity as demonstrated by how she challenges the Ocampa's beliefs and explores her mental abilities.{{sfn|Gross|Altman|1996|pp=159{{endash}}160}} In 2003, author [[Paul Ruditis]] wrote that Kes has a "fragile power" and balances a "child-like wonder" with a "maturity of someone well into adulthood".{{sfn|Ruditis|2003|p=146}}
Kolbe said Kes and [[Neelix]] brought romance and comedy to the series.<ref name="Book1" /> Lien and Neelix's actor [[Ethan Phillips]] said they enjoyed filming their scenes together.<ref name="Book222" /><ref name="Source19">{{cite web|url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1995-05-05-9505050232-story.html|title=Illinois Native Loves The Alien Role She's In|last=Spelling|first=Ian|date=May 5, 1999|work=[[Chicago Tribune]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181110060128/https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1995-05-05-9505050232-story.html|archive-date=November 10, 2018}}</ref> Writer [[Kenneth Biller]] wanted to establish the pair as living together and sexually active, but Taylor and Berman thought Kes looked too young for those storylines. Biller proposed scenes in which the characters talk about sex for the first time as a way to explore "the weirdness of alien sexuality". This discussion led to dialogue being included in the episode "[[Elogium (Star Trek: Voyager)|Elogium]]".<ref name="Magazine4">{{cite magazine|last=Kutzera|first=Dale|date=1996|title=Star Trek Voyager|magazine=[[Cinefantastique]]|location=Forrest Park|publisher=CFQ Media, LLC|volume=28|issue=4/5|page=80}}</ref> Despite this, the sexual relationship between Kes and Neelix is never clearly defined.<ref name="Book19">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Greven2003|Greven (2003)]]: p. 311</ref>


Kes and Neelix were created as an alien couple who would learn about humanity together.{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=91}} They are portrayed as an unlikely pair in age and appearance,{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|pp=97{{endash}}98}} with Kes as the dominant partner keeping Neelix out of trouble.{{sfn|Ruditis|2003|pp=158{{endash}}159}} Kes and Neelix are shown sleeping in separate bedrooms, and their sex lives are left vague. Taylor said this was done to avoid potentially offending viewers, particularly families with young children and those against [[cohabitation]].{{sfn|Gross|Altman|1996|p=134}} Taylor and Berman also worried that Kes was too young to show in a sexual relationship.{{sfn|Kutzera|1996|p=80}} In retrospect, writers and producers felt Kes and Neelix never worked as a couple;{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=91}} a break-up scene was filmed for the episode "[[Fair Trade (Star Trek: Voyager)|Fair Trade]]", but was cut due to time constraints.{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=91}}{{sfn|Ruditis|2003|pp=158{{endash}}159}}
After Kes breaks up with Neelix in "[[Warlord (Star Trek: Voyager)|Warlord]]", Phillips asked writers to provide closure for the couple in a subsequent episode. He believed the end of their relationship was too "muddy", since Kes was possessed by an alien, and thus unable to control her actions, during the break-up scene.<ref name="BreakUp1">{{cite magazine|last=Spelling|first=Ian|date=November 1997|title=Interview – Ethan Phillips|magazine=The Official Star Trek: Voyager Magazine|location=New York|publisher=[[Starlog]]}}</ref> The writers denied his request, saying: "No, let's just drop it, let's move on."<ref name="Book20">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Ruditis2003|Ruditis (2003)]]: pp. 158–159</ref> Producers had planned a scene for the episode "[[Fair Trade (Star Trek: Voyager)|Fair Trade]]" in which Kes and Neelix discuss the end of their romantic relationship, but it was removed due to time constraints.<ref name="Book20" /> Berman discussed the couple during a 1997 interview, saying: "There was a relationship with Neelix that didn't work out that well."<ref name="Magazine12">{{cite magazine|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|date=December 1997|title=Rick Berman|magazine=Star Trek: Communicator|location=New York|publisher=FANtastic Media|issue=114|page=12}}</ref>


In ''Voyager''{{'}}s first two seasons, Kes is involved in a [[love triangle]] with Neelix and ''Voyager''{{'}}s helmsman [[Tom Paris]]. Neelix becomes increasingly jealous over Paris's interest in Kes who never returns his advances.{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=91}} None of the actors involved liked this storyline,{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=91}} which was ended to avoid further damaging Neelix and Paris as characters.{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=57}}{{sfn|Gross|Altman|1996|p=157}} Aside from Neelix, Kes spent most of her scenes with a [[Holography|hologram]] known as [[The Doctor (Star Trek: Voyager)|the Doctor]]; she was key to helping him develop his humanity and persuading the crew to view him as more than just a machine.{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=99}} Along with this, the Doctor teaches Kes about medicine and Security Chief [[Tuvok]] helps her to further develop her mental abilities. She is respectful to the Doctor and Captain [[Kathryn Janeway]], who she sees as parental figures.{{sfn|Ruditis|2003|p=146}}
Kes has a more parent-child relationship with [[Kathryn Janeway]] and [[The Doctor (Star Trek: Voyager)|the Doctor]], portrayed by [[Kate Mulgrew]] and [[Robert Picardo]], respectively. Ruditis identified Kes' trust in Janeway as representing her desire to explore the universe.<ref name="Book222" /> Picardo viewed Kes as the Doctor's "sounding board" and "emotional confessor" as she mentored him on being human. Following the removal of Kes in the [[Star Trek: Voyager (season 4)|fourth season]], Picardo was concerned the Doctor would be relegated to the role as the [[comic relief]]. He suggested producers invert the Doctor's relationship with Kes to show him teaching former [[Borg (Star Trek)|Borg]] drone [[Seven of Nine]] about humanity.<ref name="Source18">{{cite web|url=https://www.gamesradar.com/star-trek-interview-exclusive/|title=Star Trek Interview Exclusive|last=Edwards|first=Richard|date=July 2, 2012|work=[[GamesRadar+]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181109060237/https://www.gamesradar.com/star-trek-interview-exclusive/|archive-date=November 9, 2018}}</ref> A darker relationship between the Doctor and Kes was planned for the episode "[[Darkling (Star Trek: Voyager)|Darkling]]". According to writer [[Joe Menosky]], the Doctor's evil alter ego was going to be "perversely sexual and sadistic" and have a "psychosexual" attraction to Kes. Menosky drafted a scene in which the Doctor interacts with holograms of Kes on the [[holodeck]], including performing surgery on one, but this was cut from the final episode.<ref name="Magazine5">{{cite magazine|last=Kaplan|first=Anna L.|date=1997|title=Robert Picardo|magazine=[[Cinefantastique]]|location=Forrest Park|publisher=CFQ Media, LLC|volume=29|issue=6/7|page=94}}</ref> Unlike Neelix, Janeway, and the Doctor, Kes has few scenes with [[B'Elanna Torres]]. [[Roxann Dawson]], who plays Torres, requested for further interaction between the two.<ref name="Source6">{{cite web|url=https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-56829726.html|title=As a Group, Actors like Show's Course|last=Spelling|first=Ian|date=June 30, 1996|work=[[The Washington Times]]|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181108034706/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-56829726.html|archive-date=November 8, 2018}} {{subscription required}}</ref>


=== Departure and return ===
=== Departure and return ===
The show-runners reluctantly terminated Lien's contract as a member of ''Voyager's'' main cast due to unresolved personal issues that negatively impacted her performances.<ref name="Zabiegalski">{{Cite web|date=April 9, 2021|author=Zabiegalski, Robin|title=Why Was Kes Really Written off Voyager?|url=https://heavy.com/entertainment/star-trek/voyager-jennifer-lien-substance-abuse/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210428095101/https://heavy.com/entertainment/star-trek/voyager-jennifer-lien-substance-abuse/|url-status=live|archive-date=April 28, 2021|website=[[Heavy (website)|Heavy]]}}</ref> [[Chakotay]]'s actor [[Robert Beltran]] said changing a lead character mid-season was unusual for the ''Star Trek'' franchise,<ref name="Magazine9">{{cite magazine|last=Schneider|first=Sue|date=March 16, 1998|title=Chakotay's Choice|magazine=[[Star Trek Monthly]]|location=London|publisher=[[Titan Magazines]]|issue=38|page=22}}</ref> though Taylor believed it was typical for a show in its later seasons.<ref name="SourceCommentary2">{{cite interview|title=Braving the Unknown: Season Four|publisher=[[Paramount Television]]|date=September 28, 2004}}</ref> There was speculation in the media that [[Harry Kim (Star Trek)|Harry Kim]]'s actor [[Garrett Wang]] was going to be replaced instead, but that he was kept due to his appeal to a certain demographic and placement on [[People (magazine)|''People'']]'s "50 Most Beautiful People in the World" list. Wang said: "The timing of that, right during our hiatus, certainly couldn't have hurt me in terms of them keeping me on the show."<ref name="Magazine10">{{cite magazine|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|date=June 1998|title=Garrett Wang|magazine=The Official Star Trek: Voyager Magazine|location=New York|publisher=[[Starlog]]|issue=17|page=37}}</ref>


In the [[Star Trek: Voyager season 4|fourth season]], ''Voyager''{{'}}s producers reluctantly fired Lien when her personal issues affected her reliability on set.{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=101}} She had become increasingly unfocused, requiring multiple [[take]]s to complete a scene.{{sfn|''The Center Seat: 55 Years of Star Trek''|2022|loc=28:44—31:00: A segment focused on Lien's removal from ''Star Trek: Voyager''}} [[Robert Duncan McNeill]], who plays Paris, described Lien as private and shy,{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=100}} and Taylor said that she refused to discuss or accept help for her problems.{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=101}} The cast and crew did not publicly disclose the reason for Lien's firing.{{sfn|Ruditis|2003|p=191}} At the time, it was believed Lien was removed to make room for [[Jeri Ryan]] as former [[Borg (Star Trek)|Borg]] drone [[Seven of Nine]],<ref>{{harvnb|Deggans|1997|p=5F}}; {{harvnb|Owen|1997|p=5}}; {{harvnb|Ruditis|2003|p=191}}</ref> but these casting choices were unrelated.{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=16}} [[Paramount Pictures|Paramount]] reported that Lien wanted to act in other projects,{{sfn|Belcher|1997|p=6}} and Taylor said Kes "did not work out as well as we wanted".{{sfn|Mietkiewicz|1997a|p=B10}}{{sfn|Deggans|1997|p=5F}} In 2004, writer [[Kenneth Biller]] talked about his disappointment about Kes's removal:
At the time Berman and Taylor said they chose to remove Kes since they felt the character was not properly developed over the course of the show,<ref name="SourceCommentary2" /> though this was later revealed be a cover story to protect Lien.<ref name="Zabiegalski"/> Executive producer [[Brannon Braga]] said this decision was a "failure of imagination on the writers' part".<ref name="Source16">{{cite web|url=https://www.cbr.com/star-trek-characters-ranking/|title=STLV: Brannon Braga Misses Working On Star Trek + Talks Frankly About Voyager, Enterprise + More|last=Drew|first=Brian|date=August 3, 2014|publisher=[[TrekMovie.com]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181109000110/https://www.cbr.com/star-trek-characters-ranking/|archive-date=November 9, 2018}}</ref> Braga requested freelance writer [[Bryan Fuller]] develop the concept for Kes' departure.<ref name="Magazine6">{{cite magazine|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|date=September 1998|title=Bryan Fuller|magazine=The Official Star Trek: Voyager Magazine|location=New York|publisher=[[Starlog]]|issue=18}}</ref><ref name="Magazine7">{{cite magazine|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|date=March 2013|title=Bryan Fuller|magazine=[[Star Trek Magazine]]|location=London|publisher=[[Titan Magazines]]|issue=171|page=50}}</ref> Receiving a positive response during a pitch meeting, Fuller helped to rewrite the character's final episode "[[The Gift (Star Trek: Voyager)|The Gift]]".<ref name="Magazine6" /><ref name="Magazine8">{{cite magazine|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|date=June 2001|title=Bryan Fuller|magazine=[[Star Trek: The Magazine]]|location=New York|publisher=Fabbri Publishing|volume=2|issue=2|page=67}}</ref> He said he had "really bonded" with Kes during the episode's production.<ref name="Magazine8" />


<blockquote>I was a little bit regretful when Kes left the show, because I thought she was an interesting character to write for—from a science fiction standpoint—because she had certain... she had telepathic abilities, she had this very compressed lifespan, she had things about her character that often lent themselves to interesting storytelling [....] We lost something in losing the Kes character.{{sfn|"Braving the Unknown: Season Four"|2004|loc=5:57—6:23: An interview about Lien's removal from ''Voyager'' in its fourth season}}</blockquote>
Some of the series' writing staff were sorry that Kes was removed; Kenneth Biller stated:


[[UPN]] executives wanted Kes cut from ''Voyager'' off-screen without explanation, but Taylor insisted that the character get a proper farewell.{{sfn|''The Center Seat: 55 Years of Star Trek''|2022|loc=28:44—31:00: A segment focused on Lien's removal from ''Star Trek: Voyager''}} Lien last appears as a full-time cast member in "[[The Gift (Star Trek: Voyager)|The Gift]]". It was intended to be the fifth episode of the fourth season, but was moved to the second after a decision was made to remove Lien earlier than planned.{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|pp=94{{endash}}95}} She had a final appearance in the [[Star Trek: Voyager season 6|season six]] episode, "[[Fury (Star Trek: Voyager)|Fury]]".{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=101}}{{sfn|DeCandido|2021b}} Berman asked her to come back before a story was completed.{{sfn|DeCandido|2021b}} Lien discussed the script with Fuller and [[Michael Taylor (screenwriter)|Michael Taylor]] to ensure that Kes was "handled with great care". Her primary request was for the character to be dramatically different than how she left.{{sfn|Patel Jr.|2000}} In a 2010 [[StarTrek.com]] interview, Lien said she preferred "The Gift" as her final episode; she disliked her performance in "Fury", explaining that she had not acted for an extended period and struggled with playing such a different version of Kes.{{sfn|Lien|2010}}
<blockquote>I was a little bit regretful when Kes left the show, because I thought she was an interesting character to write for—from a science fiction standpoint—because she had certain... she had telepathic abilities, she had this very compressed lifespan, she had things about her character that often lent themselves to interesting storytelling [....] We lost something in losing the Kes character.<ref name="VOY4 DVD">{{cite AV media|title=Star Trek Voyager – The Complete Fourth Season|date=September 28, 2004|publisher=[[Paramount Television|Paramount]]|medium=DVD}}</ref></blockquote>


== Appearances ==
Mulgrew was also disappointed by Lien's departure, describing it as a "great sorrow to me on many levels", describing the departure as the "fracturing of an ensemble cast that was extremely special to me".<ref name="MagazineMulgrew">{{cite magazine|last=Anders|first=Lou|date=October 9, 1997|title=For Everything There is a Season – Lou Anders speaks to Kate Mulgrew|magazine=[[Star Trek Monthly]]|location=London|publisher=[[Titan Magazines]]|issue=33|page=20}}</ref> [[Tim Russ]], who portrays Tuvok, referred to the character's exit as "gracious" and "poignant".<ref name="light">{{cite journal|last=Simpson|first=Paul|date=April 1998|title=Guiding Light|journal=Dreamwatch|issue=44|pages=42–47}}</ref>


=== In ''Star Trek: Voyager'' ===
After leaving ''Voyager'', Lien stopped acting to pursue an [[associate degree]] in health.<ref name="Source17">{{cite web|url=http://www.startrek.com/article/catching-up-with-jennifer-lien|title=Catching Up with Jennifer Lien|date=August 9, 2010|publisher=[[Startrek.com|StarTrek.com]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180728040127/http://www.startrek.com/article/catching-up-with-jennifer-lien|archive-date=July 28, 2018|df=mdy-all}}</ref> Despite this, producers invited her back for an episode because they wanted to use Kes to advance the story.<ref name="Magazine11">{{cite magazine|last=Kaplan|first=Anna L.|date=1997|title=Voyager Season Six Episode Guide|magazine=[[Cinefantastique]]|location=Forrest Park|publisher=CFQ Media, LLC|volume=33|issue=5|page=32}}</ref> The concept for this episode, "[[Fury (Star Trek: Voyager)|Fury]]", was developed by Braga and written by Fuller and [[Michael Taylor (screenwriter)|Michael Taylor]]. ''[[Cinefantastique]]''<nowiki/>'s Anna L. Kaplan considered Fuller's involvement ironic due to his participation in "The Gift".<ref name="Magazine11" /> Lien was uncomfortable with the original script, and requested that it be rewritten.<ref name="Magazine2" /> She said it was difficult to play a different version of Kes and interact with the other characters who had changed since her last appearance.<ref name="Source17" /> Lien did not have the same allergic response to the ear prosthetics since she did not have to wear them for the same length of time.<ref name="Magazine2" /> During a 2010 interview with [[StarTrek.com]], Lien said she preferred her performance in "The Gift" to that for "Fury", saying she made "a lot of poor acting choices" in the latter.<ref name="Source17" />


Kes is an Ocampa—a [[Telepathy|telepathic]] alien species with latent psychic abilities and a life span of only nine years.{{sfn|Okuda|Okuda|Mirek|2011}} She was born and raised in an underground city on the Ocampa home world, which was constructed by an alien known as the Caretaker after he inadvertently destroyed the planet's atmosphere. The Ocampa grow dependent on his care and are sealed from the planet's surface; despite this, Kes dreams of exploring the galaxy and her mental powers. She finds a way out of the city, but is captured and tortured by the [[Kazon]], who want to steal the Ocampa's resources. Neelix, a Talaxian, rescues her and they become a couple.{{sfn|"Caretaker"|1995}}
== Appearances ==


The Caretaker realizes he is dying and abducts beings from across the galaxy to find a compatible mate to produce an offspring who would continue caring for the Ocampa; this includes a [[Maquis (Star Trek)|Maquis]] crew and the [[Starfleet]] crew of the starship USS ''Voyager''. Kes helps Captain Kathryn Janeway and [[Chakotay]] recover their missing crew members. When the Kazon attack and attempt to steal the Caretaker's technology, Janeway orders the destruction of his vessel. Stranded in the [[Delta Quadrant]], she integrates the Maquis into her Starfleet crew and agrees to have Kes and Neelix remain on ''Voyager''.{{sfn|"Caretaker"|1995}}
===''Star Trek: Voyager''===
Kes was born in 2369 on Ocampa, a planet in the Delta Quadrant. As a part of the Ocampa species, she is [[Telepathy|telepathic]] and has a life expectancy of nine years. Prior to the show's pilot episode, Kes lived with her people in an underground city constructed by a [[Nacene]] alien known as the Caretaker. He had cared for the Ocampa since inadvertently destroying their planet's ecosystem and atmosphere thousands of years ago; the Ocampa became completely insular and dependent upon him. The Caretaker had sealed the city away from the planet's surface to protect the Ocampa; however, Kes dreamed of leaving the Ocampa enclave to explore the galaxy and develop her psionic powers, with which her ancestors were rumored to have far more proficiency. Finding a way to Ocampa's surface, she was captured and tortured by the [[Kazon]] who hope to gain access to the Ocampa city and its resources; Neelix, a Talaxian, rescued her, and they became a couple.<ref name="2019ep17">{{cite episode|title=[[Caretaker (Star Trek: Voyager)|Caretaker]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Winrich Kolbe]], Story: [[Rick Berman]], [[Michael Piller]], and [[Jeri Taylor]], Teleplay: Michael Piller and Jeri Taylor|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=January 16, 1995|season=1}}</ref>


Aboard ''Voyager'', Kes starts a [[hydroponics]] garden to provide produce to the crew.{{sfn|"Parallax"|1995}} She works as the Doctor's [[medical assistant]] while encouraging him to develop his social skills and the crew to recognize him as more than a hologram.{{sfn|Robinson|Wright|2020|p=99}} The [[Vidiians]] harvest Neelix's lungs in "[[Phage (Star Trek: Voyager)|Phage]]", and Kes donates one of her own for him.{{sfn|"Phage"|1995}} In "[[Elogium (Star Trek: Voyager)|Elogium]]", emanations from space-dwelling lifeforms cause Kes to prematurely enter a fertile period.{{#tag:ref|According to Kes, Ocampa go through a fertile period between the ages of four and five.{{sfn|"Elogium"|1995}} She is one year old in "[[Elogium (Star Trek: Voyager)|Elogium]]"{{sfn|"Elogium"|1995}} and turns two in "[[Twisted (Star Trek: Voyager)|Twisted]]", two episodes later.{{sfn|"Twisted"|1995}} By "[[Darkling (Star Trek: Voyager)|Darkling]]", which aired the following season, Kes is three years old.{{sfn|"Darkling"|1997}}|group=note}} An Ocampa goes through this process only once and it is her only time to have a child. After discussions, Neelix agrees to be a father, but Kes decides against having a child. When ''Voyager'' moves away from the aliens, the Doctor determines Kes had a false alarm and would be able to conceive in the future.{{sfn|"Elogium"|1995}} Neelix grows more paranoid regarding Paris's interest in Kes, such as in "[[Twisted (Star Trek: Voyager)|Twisted]]";{{sfn|Gross|Altman|1996|p=157}} the two resolve this tension in "[[Parturition (Star Trek: Voyager)|Parturition]]" while nursing a [[reptilian humanoid]] baby during an away mission.{{sfn|Gross|Altman|1996|p=157}}{{sfn|"Parturition"|1995}}
When the Caretaker realizes he is dying, he abducts beings from the [[Alpha Quadrant]] in the hopes of finding a compatible mate with whom to produce offspring to ensure someone can continue protecting and caring for the Ocampa. In the show's pilot episode, the Caretaker kidnaps members of a [[Maquis (Star Trek)|Maquis]] crew and the [[Starfleet]] crew of the starship USS ''Voyager''. Kes helps the ships' captains, Kathryn Janeway and Chakotay, recover their missing crew members. Janeway encourages the Caretaker to allow the Ocampa to care for themselves; although he refers to the Ocampa as children and believes they are unable to survive by themselves, she says that they must be allowed to grow up and learn to care for themselves. When the Kazon attack and attempt to steal the Caretaker's technology, Janeway orders the destruction of his vessel. Stranded in the Delta Quadrant, the Maquis and Starfleet crew merge on their journey back to the Alpha Quadrant. Kes and Neelix decide to serve as guides to the stranded crews. The remaining Ocampa stay on the planet.<ref name="2019ep17"/>


When ''Voyager'' discovers an Ocampa colony in "[[Cold Fire (Star Trek: Voyager)|Cold Fire]]", its leader Tanis teaches Kes to see and control particles on the [[Subatomic particle|subatomic]] level. Prior to this, Tuvok had been training Kes with more caution.{{sfn|"Cold Fire"|1995}} She used her abilities in earlier episodes, including having visions of a planet's destruction in "[[Time and Again (Star Trek: Voyager)|Time and Again]]" and resisting a [[Psychoactive drug|psychoactive trance]] in "[[Persistence of Vision (Star Trek: Voyager)|Persistence of Vision]]".{{sfn|"Time and Again"|1995}}{{sfn|"Persistence of Vision"|1995}} Under Tanis's tutelage, Kes develops [[pyrokinesis]], but cannot control it, nearly kills Tuvok by boiling his blood. The crew discover that Tanis is working with the Caretaker's first mate, Suspiria, to destroy ''Voyager'', but Kes subdues him with her powers. Tuvok encourages her to learn to control, rather than fear, her darker impulses.{{sfn|"Cold Fire"|1995}} In "[[Warlord (Star Trek: Voyager)|Warlord]]", Tiernan, a former dictator of the planet Illari, [[Spirit possession|possesses]] and uses her abilities to stage a coup on the new leader. Under his influence, Kes breaks up with Neelix. Although ''Voyager'' frees Kes from Tieran's control and kills him, the experience traumatizes her.{{sfn|"Warlord"|1996}}
Aboard ''Voyager'', Kes starts a [[Aeroponics|aeroponic]] garden to provide vegetables and fruit for the crew's meals.<ref name="2019ep2">{{cite episode|title=[[Parallax (Star Trek: Voyager)|Parallax]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Kim Friedman]], Story: Jim Trombetta, Teleplay: [[Brannon Braga]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=January 23, 1995|season=1}}</ref> She also develops a friendship with [[The Doctor (Star Trek: Voyager)|the Doctor]] while studying to become his medical assistant.<ref name="2019ep3">{{cite episode|title=[[Eye of the Needle (Star Trek: Voyager)|Eye of the Needle]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Winrich Kolbe]], Story: Hilary Bader, Teleplay: Bill Dial and [[Jeri Taylor]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=February 20, 1995|season=1}}</ref> She encourages him to develop a better set of social skills and pushes the crew to recognize him as more than just a [[hologram]].<ref name="2019ep4">{{cite episode|title=[[Tattoo (Star Trek: Voyager)|Tattoo]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Alexander Singer]], Story: Larry Brody, and Teleplay: [[Michael Piller]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=November 6, 1995|season=2}}</ref> In "[[Phage (Star Trek: Voyager)|Phage]]", the [[Vidiians]] harvest Neelix's lungs, and Kes donates one of her own to save his life.<ref name="2019ep5">{{cite episode|title=[[Phage (Star Trek: Voyager)|Phage]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Winrich Kolbe]], Story: Timothy De Haas, and Teleplay: [[Brannon Braga]] and Skye Dent|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=February 6, 1995|season=1}}</ref> During "Elogium", emanations from space-dwelling lifeforms cause Kes to prematurely enter the elogium, the Ocampa female reproductive state. This condition can only occur once during an Ocampa life cycle. Kes and Neelix disagree over the idea of having children. Neelix eventually agrees to being a father, but Kes decides against conceiving a child. After the ship moves away from the life forms, the Doctor determines that Kes has gone through a false alarm; she will be able to go through a true elogium in the future.<ref name="2019ep6">{{cite episode|title=[[Elogium (Star Trek: Voyager)|Elogium]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Winrich Kolbe]], Story: [[Jimmy Diggs]] and Steve J. Kay, Teleplay: [[Kenneth Biller]] and [[Jeri Taylor]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=September 18, 1995|season=2}}</ref> Throughout the first two seasons, Neelix becomes jealous of Tom Paris' interest in Kes. Neelix and Paris resolve this tension in "[[Parturition (Star Trek: Voyager)|Parturition]]" while nursing a [[reptilian humanoid]] baby together during an away mission.<ref name="Book18">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Greven2003|Greven (2003)]]: p. 308</ref>


Kes is shocked into a coma by a [[Force field (technology)|force field]] protecting a [[holy site]] in "[[Sacred Ground (Star Trek: Voyager)|Sacred Ground]]". Janeway cures her by undergoing a religious ceremony to learn she must rely on her own faith rather than technology.{{sfn|"Sacred Ground"|1996}} In "[[Darkling (Star Trek: Voyager)|Darkling]]", Kes is attracted to Zahir, a part of an alien species of explorers, and considers temporarily joining his journey. The Doctor injures Zahir and kidnaps Kes after developing an evil [[alter ego]] while grafting new personalities into his program. After the Doctor is returned to normal, Kes decides to remain on ''Voyager''.{{sfn|"Darkling"|1997}} Throughout "Before and After", Kes lives short periods of her life in reverse order, from her death to her conception. Set in an [[alternative timeline]], she is romantically involved with Paris and has a daughter who is married to and has a son with Ensign [[Harry Kim (Star Trek)|Harry Kim]]. In this time, Kes participates in ''Voyager''’s year-long battle with the Krenim, later shown in “[[Year of Hell]]”. The Doctor brings her back to the present, and Tuvok says likely saw only a possible timeline and her actions may have changed the future.{{sfn|"Before and After"|1997}}
During the first two seasons, Kes slowly develops her psionic powers. She has visions of a planet's destruction in "[[Time and Again (Star Trek: Voyager)|Time and Again]]"<ref name="2019ep7">{{cite episode|title=[[Time and Again (Star Trek: Voyager)|Time and Again]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Les Landau]], Story: [[David Kemper (writer)|David Kemper]], Teleplay: David Kemper and [[Michael Piller]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=January 30, 1995|season=1}}</ref> and is able to resist a [[Psychoactive drug|psychoactive trance]] to save the crew in "[[Persistence of Vision (Star Trek: Voyager)|Persistence of Vision]]".<ref name="2019ep8">{{cite episode|title=[[Persistence of Vision (Star Trek: Voyager)|Persistence of Vision]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[James L. Conway]], Writer: [[Jeri Taylor]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=October 30, 1995|season=2}}</ref> ''Voyager'' discovers a second Ocampa colony in "[[Cold Fire (Star Trek: Voyager)|Cold Fire]]", and its leader Tanis teaches Kes to see and control particles on the [[Subatomic particle|subatomic]] level. Kes was previously trained by [[Tuvok]], who took a more cautious approach. Under Tanis' tutelage, Kes develops [[pyrokinesis]], but she is unable to control the power and almost kills Tuvok by boiling his blood. After discovering that Tanis is collaborating with the Caretaker's first mate, Suspiria, to destroy ''Voyager'', Kes subdues him with her powers. Tuvok reminds Kes that she must learn to control, rather than fear, her darker impulses.<ref name="2019ep9">{{cite episode|title=[[Cold Fire (Star Trek: Voyager)|Cold Fire]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Cliff Bole]], Story: Anthony Williams, Teleplay: [[Brannon Braga]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=November 13, 1995|season=2}}</ref> Tiernan, a former dictator of the planet Illari, takes control of Kes' body in "Warlord". He uses her mental powers to stage a coup against his planet's leader. While under Tieran's influence, Kes breaks up with Neelix. The crew eventually free Kes from Tieran's control and kill him, though she is traumatized by the experience.<ref name="2019ep10">{{cite episode|title=[[Warlord (Star Trek: Voyager)|Warlord]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[David Livingston (director)|David Livingston]], Story: Andrew Shepard Price and Mark Gaberman, Teleplay: Lisa Klink|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=November 20, 1996|season=3}}</ref>


During "[[Scorpion (Star Trek: Voyager)|Scorpion]]", Kes becomes telepathically connected with [[Species 8472]] who are at war with the Borg.{{sfn|"Scorpion, Part I"|1997}} Her powers advance at an exponential rate in “The Gift” to the point that she can no longer stay aboard ''Voyager'' as they threaten to destroy the ship. Leaving on a [[Shuttlecraft (Star Trek)|shuttlecraft]], Kes hurls ''Voyager'' and its crew safely beyond Borg space, 9,500 light-years closer to Earth, before turning into living energy.{{sfn|"The Gift"|1997}} She returns in “Fury” in which she has memory loss as she nears the end of her life cycle. She believes Janeway had kidnapped her from Ocampa and travels back in time to negotiate with the Vidiians to take her younger self home in return for helping them access ''Voyager'' to harvest the crew’s organs. After this is stopped, the younger Kes makes a hologram to remind her future self about her love for the crew. The older Kes sees this and returns to Ocampa.{{sfn|"Fury"|2000}}
While exploring a Nechani [[holy site]] in "[[Sacred Ground (Star Trek: Voyager)|Sacred Ground]]", Kes is shocked into a coma by its [[Force field (fiction)|force field]]. The Nechani believe Kes is being punished for her [[Sacrilege|sacrilegious behavior]]. After participating in a religious ritual, Janeway realizes she must rely on her own faith rather than technology to cure Kes. Going against her crew's advice, Janeway carries Kes into the shrine. The force field does not harm them, and Kes recovers.<ref name="SacredGround">{{cite episode|title=[[Sacred Ground (Star Trek: Voyager)|Sacred Ground]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Robert Duncan McNeill]], Story: Geo Cameron, Teleplay: Lisa Klink|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=October 30, 1996|season=3}}</ref> In "Darkling", Kes becomes attracted to Zahir, who is a part of a humanoid species called the Mikhal Travelers. She is interested in the Mikhal Travelers for their desire to explore space. The Doctor injures Zahir and kidnaps Kes after developing an evil [[alter ego]] while grafting new personalities into his program. Kes considers leaving ''Voyager'' to be with Zahir, but later decides against this.<ref name="2019ep11">{{cite episode|title=[[Darkling (Star Trek: Voyager)|Darkling]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Alexander Singer]], Story: [[Brannon Braga]] and [[Joe Menosky]], Teleplay: Joe Menosky|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=February 19, 1997|season=3}}</ref>


=== Other appearances ===
In "Before and After", an episode in the [[Star Trek: Voyager (season 3)|third season]], Kes lives short periods of her life in reverse order, starting with her death and ending with her birth. In this [[alternative timeline]], she is romantically involved with Paris, and they have a daughter, Linnis, who marries and has a son with Harry Kim. During this timeline, Kes participates in ''Voyager's'' year-long battle with the Krenim, which takes place in the season four episode "[[Year of Hell]]". She is infected with particles from a [[List of fictional elements, materials, isotopes and atomic particles|chroniton]] torpedo during the Krenim attack; Paris speculates that this exposure to chroniton radiation is the reason why Kes is irregularly jumping back in time. When the Doctor brings Kes back to the present, she documents information about the Krenim and their future attack. At the end of the episode, Tuvok says Kes has seen only one possible future for ''Voyager''.<ref name="2019ep12">{{cite episode|title=[[Before and After (Star Trek: Voyager)|Before and After]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: Allan Kroeker, Writer: [[Kenneth Biller]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=April 9, 1997|season=3}}</ref> During "[[Scorpion (Star Trek: Voyager)|Scorpion]]", ''Voyager'' becomes entangled in a major conflict between the Borg and [[Species 8472]]. Partially due to her exposure to the powerful telepathic influx of Species 8472, Kes begins to evolve into a different state of being.<ref name="2019ep13">{{cite episode|title=[[Scorpion, Part I]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[David Livingston (director)|David Livingston]], Writer: [[Brannon Braga]] and [[Joe Menosky]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=May 21, 1997|season=3}}</ref><ref name="2019ep14">{{cite episode|title=[[Scorpion, Part II]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Winrich Kolbe]], Writer: [[Brannon Braga]] and [[Joe Menosky]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=September 3, 1997|season=[[Star Trek: Voyager (season 4)|4]]}}</ref> In "The Gift", she realizes she can no longer remain aboard ''Voyager'', as her powers threaten to destroy the ship. She uses her newly acquired powers to hurl ''Voyager'' and its crew safely beyond Borg space, 9,500 light-years closer to Earth, before turning into living energy.<ref name="2019ep15">{{cite episode|title=[[The Gift (Star Trek: Voyager)|The Gift]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Anson Williams]], Writer: [[Joe Menosky]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=September 10, 1997|season=[[Star Trek: Voyager (season 4)|4]]}}</ref>


In 1995, [[Pocket Books]] began publishing [[List of Star Trek: Voyager novels|''Star Trek: Voyager'' novels]] about stories set during the show's run and after its [[Endgame (Star Trek: Voyager)|series finale]].{{sfn|Ayers|2006|loc=Information cited to the following chapter: "Overture: ''Star Trek'' Fiction: Then and Now"}}{{sfn|Ayers|2006|loc=Information cited to the following chapter: "Section 7: ''Star Trek: Voyager'': Numbered Novels"}}{{#tag:ref|[[List of Star Trek novels|''Star Trek'' novels]] are not considered [[Star Trek canon|canon]], and information from them can be contradicted and superseded by the [[List of Star Trek television series|''Star Trek'' shows]] and [[List of Star Trek films|films]].{{sfn|Ward|2012}} [[David Alan Mack]], a longtime writer of ''Star Trek'' books, said that the [[Tie-in|tie-ins]] were not considered canon and must be consistent with canonical materials.{{sfn|Britt|2021}}|group=note}} Kes appears in the 1995 [[novelization]] of "Caretaker" by [[L. A. Graf]] and the 1996 one for "[[Flashback (Star Trek: Voyager)|Flashback]]" by [[Diane Carey]].{{sfn|Ayers|2006|loc=Information cited to the following chapter: "Section 10: Novelizations"}} [[Nathan Archer]] began writing the 1995 book, ''Ragnorak'', before the pilot episode aired and said that how he had imagined Kes based on the series bible was radically different from her depiction in the show.{{sfn|Ayers|2006|loc=Information cited to the following chapter: "Section 7: ''Star Trek: Voyager'': Numbered Novels"}} In [[Greg Cox (writer)|Greg Cox]]'s 1997 novel, ''The Black Shore'', Kes has horrific visions after the crew takes [[shore leave]] on a seemingly idyllic planet. Cox included scenes between Kes and Chief Engineer [[B'Elanna Torres]] after reading an interview in which Torres's actor [[Roxann Dawson]] talked about how the characters rarely interacted. ''Marooned'', published in the same year, focuses on Kes being kidnapped by a [[space pirate]]; the author [[Christie Golden]] said that she wanted to explore how Kes would appear to an alien with a lifespan of thousands of years.{{sfn|Ayers|2006|loc=Information cited to the following chapter: "Section 7: ''Star Trek: Voyager'': Numbered Novels"}}
Kes revisits ''Voyager'' in "Fury", in which she is near the end of her life cycle and experiencing memory loss. She mistakenly believes that Janeway kidnapped her from Ocampa, and she travels back in time to negotiate with the Vidiians, promising to help them access the ship to harvest the crew members' organs if they take her younger self home. After this plan is stopped, the younger Kes creates a hologram to remind her future self about her affection for the crew and how much they had cared for her. After seeing the hologram, the older version of Kes says goodbye to the crew before taking her ship back to Ocampa.<ref name="2019ep16">{{cite episode|title=[[Fury (Star Trek: Voyager)|Fury]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[John Bruno (director)|John Bruno]], Story: [[Rick Berman]] and [[Brannon Braga]], Teleplay: [[Bryan Fuller]] and [[Michael Taylor (screenwriter)|Michael Taylor]]|network=[[UPN]]}}</ref>


Kes is included in stories published after ''Voyager'' ended.{{sfn|Ayers|2006|loc=Information cited to the following chapter: "Section 8: ''Star Trek: Voyager'': Unnumbered Novels"}} She goes back in time to help create an Ocampa and Nacene hybrid in Heather Jarman's 2006 novel ''Evolution'', the third in the ''String Theory'' trilogy.{{sfn|DeCandido|2021b}}{{sfn|Ayers|2006|loc=Information cited to the following chapter: "Section 8: ''Star Trek: Voyager'': Unnumbered Novels"}}{{#tag:ref|The Nacene are a species of aliens that include the Caretaker and Suspiria, who are shown in "[[Caretaker (Star Trek: Voyager)|Caretaker]]" and "[[Cold Fire (Star Trek: Voyager)|Cold Fire]]", respectively.{{sfn|"Cold Fire"|1995}}|group=note}} The book describes the Kes from "Fury" as the "manifestation of her dark side" made as byproduct of this time travel.{{sfn|DeCandido|2021b}} Jarman used ''Evolution'' to explore questions she had with ''Voyager'', such as how Neelix felt about Kes after her departure and what the Ocampa home world looked like in the past.{{sfn|Ayers|2006|loc=Information cited to the following chapter: "Section 8: ''Star Trek: Voyager'': Unnumbered Novels"}} In [[Kirsten Beyer]]'s 2012 book, ''The Eternal Tide'', Kes helps to resurrect a dead Janeway.{{sfn|DeCandido|2021b}}
=== Non-canonical appearances ===
Kes appears in [[Star Trek canon|non-canon]] novels and short stories adapted from ''Star Trek: Voyager''. In [[Christie Golden]]'s 1997 book ''Marooned'', an alien kidnaps Kes,<ref>{{cite book|title=Marooned|url=https://archive.org/details/marooned00gold|url-access=registration|last=Golden|first=Christie|date=December 1, 1997|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|isbn=9781471106439|author-link=Christie Golden}}</ref> and during [[Greg Cox (writer)|Greg Cox]]'s 1997 novel ''The Black Shore'', she feels a "psychic call" when the crew takes [[shore leave]] on a planet.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Black Shore|url=https://archive.org/details/blackshore00greg|url-access=registration|last=Cox|first=Greg|date=May 1, 1997|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|isbn=978-0671560614|author-link=Greg Cox (writer)}}</ref> Kes is featured in the [[List of Star Trek novels|novels]] [[Mosaic (Star Trek)|''Mosaic'']] (1996) and ''Pathways'' (1998) in which she accompanies an away team on an unknown planet and helps the crew escape a prison camp, respectively.<ref>{{cite book|title=Mosaic|last=Taylor|first=Jeri|date=January 10, 1996|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|isbn=9780671563110|author-link=Jeri Taylor|title-link=Mosaic (Star Trek)}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Pathways|url=https://archive.org/details/pathwaysnovel00tayl|url-access=registration|last=Taylor|first=Jeri|date=August 1, 1998|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|isbn=9780671026264|author-link=Jeri Taylor}}</ref>{{efn| Although a majority of the ''Star Trek'' novels are considered [[Star Trek canon|non-canon]], ''Mosaic'' and ''Pathways'' were initially described as [[canon (fiction)|canon]].<ref name="CanonBookSources">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Rehak2018|Rehak (2018)]]: p. 203</ref><ref name="SourceCanon">{{cite web|url=http://www.startrek.com/information/faq.asp?ID=1321|title=''Star Trek'': Frequently Asked Questions|publisher=[[StarTrek.com]]|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20001101030731/http://www.startrek.com/information/faq.asp?ID=1321|archive-date=November 1, 2000|df=mdy-all}}</ref> This was later contradicted and the books are considered non-canon.<ref name="SourceCanon2">{{cite web|url=https://www.startrek.com/article/ten-for-ward-5-undefined-10-trek-novels-the-canon-passed-over|title=Ten for Ward #5 – 10 Trek Novels "the Canon" Passed Over|last=Dayton|first=Ward|date=November 5, 2019|publisher=[[StarTrek.com]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191105223443/https://www.startrek.com/article/ten-for-ward-5-undefined-10-trek-novels-the-canon-passed-over|archive-date=November 5, 2019|df=mdy-all}}</ref>}} Jennifer Lien contributes recipes for [[potato salad]] and a "good-karma [[lentil soup]]" for the 1999 [[cookbook]] based on the series. Written by Ethan Phillips and [[William J. Birnes]], the book mentions that [[tuber]]s are Kes' favorite food.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Star Trek Cookbook|last1=Phillips|first1=Ethan|last2=Birnes|first2=William J|date=January 1999|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|isbn=9781451686968}}</ref>


Kes also appears in short stories,{{sfn|Ayers|2006|loc=Information cited to the following chapter: "Section 13: Anthologies}} like Penny A. Proctor's "Restoration" from the 2002 anthology [[Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (short story collection)|''Star Trek: Strange New Worlds V'']] in which she revives Ocampa's ecosystem.{{sfn|DeCandido|2021b}}{{sfn|Ayers|2006|loc=Information cited to the following chapter: "Section 13: Anthologies}} She is included in three stories from the 2005 collection ''Distant Shores''. In Kim Sheard's "Winds of Change", Kes struggles with aggression after "Warlord" and asks Torres for advice. Sheard developed the concept after being told the anthology would focus on unusual character combinations. "Closure" is about Neelix seeing Kes after being caught in a [[cave-in]] with Seven of Nine. The author [[James Swallow]] was inspired by how [[Ethan Phillips]], who plays Neelix, wanted closure for his character's relationship with Kes. In "Brief Candle", Neelix talks about one of his memories with Kes; the writer [[Christopher L. Bennett]] said she was one of his favorite ''Voyager'' characters.{{sfn|Ayers|2006|loc=Information cited to the following chapter: "Section 13: Anthologies}}
In Christie Golden's novel trilogy ''Dark Matters'', Kes is known as the "Entity", and gathers mutated [[dark matter]]. She has forgotten about her past aboard ''Voyager'' after turning into living energy, but slowly regains some memories over the course of the books. She does not contact the crew and is told she is a [[Parallel universes in fiction|parallel-universe]] version of herself, separate from the one featured in "Fury". Tuvok, however, does briefly sense her presence before her departure.<ref>{{cite book|title=Cloak and Dagger|url=https://archive.org/details/cloakdagger00gold|url-access=registration|last=Golden|first=Christie|date=November 1, 2000|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|isbn=0671035827|author-link=Christie Golden}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Ghost Dance|url=https://archive.org/details/ghostdance00gold|url-access=registration|last=Golden|first=Christie|date=November 1, 2000|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|isbn=0671035835|author-link=Christie Golden}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Shadow of Heaven|url=https://archive.org/details/shadowofheaven00gold|url-access=registration|last=Golden|first=Christie|date=December 2000|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|isbn=0671035843|author-link=Christie Golden}}</ref> In [[Kirsten Beyer]]'s 2012 novel ''The Eternal Tide'', Kes and [[Q (Junior)|Q Junior]] resurrect Janeway after she is assimilated by the Borg and subsequently killed. Q Junior teaches Kes how to pull Janeway's body back together and restore her to her most perfect state.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Eternal Tide|last=Beyer|first=Kirsten|date=August 28, 2012|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|isbn=9781451668186|author-link=Kirsten Beyer}}</ref>


== Analysis ==
Kes also features in Heather Jarman's 2006 book ''Evolution'', the third installment of the trilogy ''String Theory'', in which she helps the Doctor and [[Q (Star Trek)|Q]] with the birth of an Ocampa-Nacene hybrid. When the Ocampan mother is unable to carry the baby to term, Kes merges with her to act as a surrogate. After giving birth to a boy, Kes takes him to Ocampa; a rainstorm on the planet hints at the recovery of its ecosystem. The novel [[retcons]] Kes' appearance in "Fury" as the manifestation of her dark side, formed as a side effect of a confrontation with a renegade Nacene.<ref>{{cite book|title=Evolution|last=Jarman|first=Heather|date=February 28, 2006|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|isbn=9781416523291}}</ref> In Penny A. Proctor's short story "Restoration", included in the 2001 anthology ''Strange New Worlds V'', Kes sacrifices herself to revive Ocampa's ecosystem.<ref>{{cite book|title=Strange New Worlds V|author-last=Proctor|author-first=Penny A|date=May 1, 2002|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|isbn=9780743437783|editor-last=Smith|editor-first=Dean Wesley|chapter=Restoration}}</ref> The [[mirror universe]] version of Kes features in the ''Star Trek: Mirror Universe'' novel series.<ref>{{cite book|title=Obsidian Alliances|last1=Shaw|first1=Sarah|last2=DeCandido|first2=R. A.|last3=David|first3=Peter|date=March 20, 2007|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|isbn=978-1416524717}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Shards and Shadows|date=January 6, 2009|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|isbn=978-1416558507|editor-last1=Palmieri|editor-first1=Marco|editor-last2=Clark|editor-first2=Margaret}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Rise Like Lions|url=https://archive.org/details/startrekmirrorun00davi|url-access=registration|last=Mack|first=David|date=November 29, 2011|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|isbn=978-1451607192|author-link=David Alan Mack}}</ref>

=== Femininity ===

Academics have analyzed Kes based on her gender and representation of femininity. [[Communication studies]] professor [[Mia Consalvo]] described her as a "woman with stereotypically feminine traits" and an example of how ''Star Trek'' portrays these characteristics, namely "empathy and caring", as better suited for healthcare positions rather than leadership.{{sfn|Consalvo|2004|p=202}} [[Culture of the United States|American culture]] historian Peter W.Y. Lee said ''Voyager'' characterizes Kes as a "little girl" and struggles to maintain her innocence as the series progressed,{{sfn|Lee|2020|pp=83{{endash}}84}} specifically with scenes involving sex or motherhood.{{sfn|Lee|2020|pp=85{{endash}}87}} Lee argued that she becomes too mature for this role after adopting a "more aggressive womanhood and sexuality" in "Warlord", which foreshadows her having "outgrown her home" and leaving ''Voyager''.{{sfn|Lee|2020|pp=91{{endash}}93}}

Other scholars examined Kes in the context of the [[1990s]]—when ''Voyager'' was airing—and how women were being depicted in that decade.{{sfn|Garcia-Siino|2022|p=49}}{{sfn|Heath|Carlisle|2020|p=66}} Editor Leimar Garcia- Siino noted that although Kes is active with her hydroponics garden and her medical and psychic training, her character was still shaped by the [[postfeminism]] of the 1990s and its "reactionary [[Antifeminism|anti-feminist]] and traditionally gendered views".{{sfn|Garcia-Siino|2022|p=49}} Authors K.M. Heath and A. S. Carlisle interpreted ''Voyager''{{'}}s female characters, including Kes, as mirroring similar struggles that American women faced in the 1990s.{{sfn|Heath|Carlisle|2020|p=66}}

=== Mental abilities ===

Critics have offered many readings on Kes's mental abilities, like how they are shown as dangerous or unpredictable.{{sfn|Gymnich|2005|pp=68{{endash}}70}}{{sfn|Tembo|2020|pp=23{{endash}}24}} Media studies scholar Marion Gymnich wrote that in "Cold Fire", Kes changes from "generally very friendly and gentle" to "extremely destructive" after being tutored by another Ocampa. She cited her as an example of ''Star Trek'' negatively portraying telepathy.{{sfn|Gymnich|2005|pp=68{{endash}}70}} Comparing ''Voyager'' to [[Homer]]'s the ''[[Odyssey]]'', literary scholar Kwasu David Tembo likened Kes to two of the poem's characters—[[Calypso (mythology)|Calypso]] and [[Circe]]—as her powers both endanger the ship and aid in its homeward journey. Tembo wrote that Kes and Circle both have the "attractive and equally dangerous aspects of [[Aeaea]] and Ocampan power are under the absolute control of a female authority".{{sfn|Tembo|2020|pp=23{{endash}}24}}

Other scholars focused on how Kes's powers contributed to her character development.{{sfn|Dove-Viebahn|2007|p=606}}{{sfn|Lee|2020|pp=90{{endash}}91}} Aviva Dove Viebahn, a professor of [[media studies]], argued that the non-human Kes is nearly an example of [[tokenism]], but believed this is avoided as her abilities, which are shown to be stronger than ''Voyager''{{'}}s medical and scientific technologies, provide her with agency.{{sfn|Dove-Viebahn|2007|p=606}} Lee wrote that ''Voyager'' focuses Kes's character arc on her mental abilities rather than her physical development; he explained that "Kes’s girl power rested in her brains, not her bared skin".{{sfn|Lee|2020|pp=90{{endash}}91}}


== Reception ==
== Reception ==
=== Critical reception ===
[[File:Jennifer Anne Lien, April 1996.jpg|thumb|right|Some critics responded positively to Lien's performance, though a majority were more critical of Kes as a character.|alt=A headshot of a woman smiling toward the camera.]]


Kes's age was a topic of critical commentary.<ref>{{harvnb|Harrisson|2023}}; {{harvnb|Ospina|2014}}; {{harvnb|Ulster|2020}}; {{harvnb|Wrigley|2022|p=422}}</ref> [[Bustle (magazine)|''Bustle'']]'s Marie Southard Ospina praised "Elogium" for its portrayal of a woman voluntarily not having a baby, but felt that Kes's age made the moment uncomfortable.{{sfn|Ospina|2014}} Other commentators felt Kes was too young to be dating Neelix.{{sfn|Ulster|2020}}{{sfn|Wrigley|2022|p=422}} According to ''[[Den of Geek]]''{{'}}s Juliette Harrisson, the [[Age disparity in sexual relationships|age gap]] was frequently criticized online.{{sfn|Harrisson|2023}} Science fiction author [[Sylvia Spruck Wrigley]] interpreted Kes as undergoing [[puberty]] in "Elogium", noting that it raises questions about Neelix starting a relationship with a [[Preadolescence|prepubescent]] girl.{{sfn|Wrigley|2022|p=422}}{{#tag:ref|In "[[Elogium (Star Trek: Voyager)|Elogium]]", Captain [[Kathryn Janeway]] compares Kes's fertile period to humans going through puberty.{{sfn|"Elogium"|1995}}|group=note}} Harrisson and ''[[The Philadelphia Inquirer]]''{{'}}s Jonathan Storm wrote that the age difference could be rationalized since Kes and Neelix are aliens with different biology than humans.{{sfn|Harrisson|2023}}{{sfn|Storm|1995|p=E6}}
Lien received some positive feedback for her performance. In a 1995 review of "Caretaker", [[Variety (magazine)|''Variety'']]'s Kinsey Lowe praised Lien's performance as a "beguiling blend of naive wonder and fierce dedication".<ref name="Source14">{{cite web|url=https://variety.com/1995/tv/reviews/star-trek-voyager-the-caretaker-1200440067/|title=Star Trek: Voyager the Caretaker|last=Lowe|first=Kinsey|date=January 15, 1995|work=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181109013420/https://variety.com/1995/tv/reviews/star-trek-voyager-the-caretaker-1200440067/|archive-date=November 9, 2018}}</ref> ''[[Screen Rant]]'''s Alexandra August applauded Lien for trying "her best with what she was given", but felt she could not make Kes "very dynamic" as a character.<ref name="Source10">{{cite web|url=https://screenrant.com/star-trek-voyager-casting-decisions/|title=Star Trek: 7 Casting Decisions That Hurt Voyager (And 15 That Saved It)|last=August|first=Alexandra|date=August 31, 2018|website=[[Screen Rant]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180901104417/https://screenrant.com/star-trek-voyager-casting-decisions/|archive-date=September 1, 2018|df=mdy-all}}</ref> Kes' removal in season four was praised by critics who believed the character was poorly developed.<ref name="Source3">{{cite web|url=https://www.denofgeek.com/tv/star-trek-voyager/25477/why-star-trek-voyagers-fourth-season-is-the-best|title=Why Star Trek: Voyager's fourth season is the best|last=Harrison|first=Juliette|date=May 10, 2013|work=[[Den of Geek!]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180409030601/http://www.denofgeek.com/tv/star-trek-voyager/25477/why-star-trek-voyagers-fourth-season-is-the-best|archive-date=April 9, 2018|df=mdy-all}}</ref><ref name="Source24">{{cite web|url=https://tv.avclub.com/the-late-greats-18-plus-tv-characters-who-buoyed-shows-1798284242|title=The late greats: 18-plus TV characters who buoyed shows midstream|last=Hughes|first=William|date=August 31, 2015|work=[[The A.V. Club]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171026084101/https://tv.avclub.com/the-late-greats-18-plus-tv-characters-who-buoyed-shows-1798284242|archive-date=October 26, 2017|df=mdy-all}}</ref> Rob Owen, writing for Albany's ''[[Albany Times Union|Times Union]]'', criticized Kes as "reduced to a subservient [[Nurse Chapel]] role".<ref name="Newspaper1">{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/218546251/|title=''Star Trek'': Boldly fighting for viewers|last=Owen|first=Rob|date=September 14, 1997|work=The Town Talk|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190723004237/https://www.newspapers.com/image/218546251/|archive-date=July 23, 2019|via=[[Ancestry.com#Newspapers.com|Newspapers.com]]|url-access=subscription}}{{subscription required}}</ref> However, ''[[The Virginian-Pilot]]''<nowiki/>'s Larry Bonko was disappointed by Kes' exit, as he felt the character "gave the series heart".<ref name="Source152">{{cite web|url=https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-68509183.html|title=Fresh Faces for Fall Jeri Ryan 'Star Trek' Character is One on Many Changes in Store (Daily Break)|last=Bonko|first=Larry|date=September 4, 1997|work=[[The Virginian-Pilot]]|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150127024453/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-68509183.html|archive-date=January 27, 2015|df=mdy-all}}{{subscription required}}</ref>


Critics praised the decision to remove Kes during ''Voyager''{{'}}s fourth season,<ref>{{harvnb|Harrisson|2013}}; {{harvnb|Heldenfels|1997|p=B8}}; {{harvnb|Hughes|2015}}; {{harvnb|Mietkiewicz|1997b|p=D2}}; {{harvnb|Owen|1997|p=5}}; {{harvnb|Pennington|2001|p=F2}}; {{harvnb|Pritchard|2017}}</ref> finding her to be boring{{sfn|Heldenfels|1997|p=B8}}{{sfn|Pennington|2001|p=F2}} and without a clear direction.<ref> {{harvnb|Harrisson|2013}}; {{harvnb|Hughes|2015}}; {{harvnb|Mietkiewicz|1997b|p=D2}}; {{harvnb|Pritchard|2017}}</ref> [[Rob Owen (journalist)|Rob Owen]], writing for the [[Albany Times Union]], felt she was "reduced to a subservient [[Christine Chapel|Nurse Chapel]] role" early in the series.{{sfn|Owen|1997|p=5}} Henry Mietkiewicz of the ''[[Toronto Star]]'' thought she did not contribute much outside of her medical training.{{sfn|Mietkiewicz|1997b|p=D2}} In retrospective reviews, ''[[The A.V. Club]]''{{'}}s William Hughes called Kes the show's "most superfluous character",{{sfn|Hughes|2015}} and Tom Pritchard of ''[[Gizmodo]]'' dismissed her as "generally a pretty crap and useless character".{{sfn|Pritchard|2017}}
''[[Screen Rant]]'' contributors felt Kes had potential if her storylines focused more on her short lifespan and mental powers.<ref name="Source10" /><ref name="Source11">{{cite web|url=https://screenrant.com/star-trek-voyager-last-minute-changes/|title=Star Trek: 15 Last-Minute Changes That Saved Voyager (And 5 That Hurt It)|last=Thompson|first=Gregory|date=October 4, 2018|website=[[Screen Rant]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181005135830/https://screenrant.com/star-trek-voyager-last-minute-changes/|archive-date=October 5, 2018|df=mdy-all}}</ref><ref name="Source22">{{cite web|url=https://screenrant.com/star-trek-every-movie-tv-show-ranked/|title=Star Trek: Every Movie And TV Show, Ranked Worst To Best|last=Snellgrove|first=Chris|date=March 8, 2018|website=[[Screen Rant]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181110033003/https://screenrant.com/star-trek-every-movie-tv-show-ranked/|archive-date=November 10, 2018}}</ref> Snellgrove cited Kes as an example of how certain ''Star Trek: Voyager'' characters were underused.<ref name="Source22" /> August felt she was not given enough screen time or character development to become interesting.<ref name="Source10" /> Thompson described the Ocampa as one of the more fascinating species introduced on ''Star Trek: Voyager'', and wrote that Kes' departure was one of the five things that hurt the show.<ref name="Source11" />


Other reviewers responded more negatively to this casting change.<ref>{{harvnb|Barrett|Barrett|2016|p=172}}; {{harvnb|Bonko|1997}}; {{harvnb|Patrizio|2004}}</ref> ''[[The Virginian-Pilot]]''{{'}}s Larry Bonko, for instance, was disappointed as he felt that Kes "gave the series heart".{{sfn|Bonko|1997}} Andy Patrizio of ''[[IGN]]'' preferred Lien as Kes over the new addition of Ryan as Seven of Nine.{{sfn|Patrizio|2004}} Writers [[Duncan Barrett]] and Michele Barrett cited Lien's removal as an example of ''Star Trek'' having "a serious historical problem with the treatment of its female performers", explaining that a male lead was never taken off a ''Star Trek'' series.{{sfn|Barrett|Barrett|2016|p=172}}{{#tag:ref|Prior to Lien being taken off ''Star Trek: Voyager'', [[Grace Lee Whitney]] was removed from [[Star Trek: The Original Series|''Star Trek: The Original Series'']], [[Gates McFadden]] from [[Star Trek: The Next Generation|''Star Trek: The Next Generation'']], and [[Terry Farrell (actress)|Terry Farrell]] from [[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine|''Star Trek: Deep Space Nine'']].{{sfn|Barrett|Barrett|2016|p=172}}|group=note}}
Kes' romance with Neelix was the subject of criticism. Although the relationship was introduced in the pilot, Ruditis felt it was "somewhat undefined as the series progressed".<ref name="Book20" /> [[TrekMovie.com]]'s Matt Wright panned the couple as "borderline gross",<ref name="Source21">{{cite web|url=https://trekmovie.com/2017/03/08/review-star-trek-voyager-the-complete-series-on-dvd/|title=Review: 'Star Trek: Voyager' – The Complete Series on DVD|last=Wright|first=Matt|date=March 8, 2017|publisher=[[TrekMovie.com]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171102221506/https://trekmovie.com/2017/03/08/review-star-trek-voyager-the-complete-series-on-dvd/|archive-date=November 2, 2017|df=mdy-all}}</ref> and Thompson cited them as having the worst [[Chemistry (relationship)|chemistry]] on the series.<ref name="Source8">{{cite web|url=https://screenrant.com/star-trek-voyager-couples-saved-show/|title=Star Trek: 10 Couples That Hurt Voyager (And 10 That Saved It)|last=Thompson|first=Gregory|date=September 3, 2018|website=[[Screen Rant]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180904111903/https://screenrant.com/star-trek-voyager-couples-saved-show/|archive-date=September 4, 2018|df=mdy-all}}</ref> Thompson and [[Gizmodo]]'s Tom Pritchard wrote that Kes would have benefited if Neelix was not included on the show.<ref name="Source8" /><ref name="Source23">{{cite web|url=http://www.gizmodo.co.uk/2017/09/dont-forget-every-star-trek-series-had-a-terrible-first-season/|title=Don't Forget, Every Star Trek Series Had a Terrible First Season|last=Pritchard|first=Tom|date=September 22, 2017|website=[[Gizmodo]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180504190924/http://www.gizmodo.co.uk/2017/09/dont-forget-every-star-trek-series-had-a-terrible-first-season|archive-date=May 4, 2018|df=mdy-all}}</ref> August criticized the frequency in which Kes' storylines revolved around her love life.<ref name="Source10" /> Kes' relationship with other characters received a better response.<ref name="Source8" /><ref name="Source31">{{cite web|url=https://screenrant.com/star-trek-couples-unexpected-fan-art-redesigns/|title=20 Wild Fan Redesigns Of Unexpected Star Trek Couples|last=August|first=Alexandra|date=June 17, 2018|website=[[Screen Rant]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181110221652/https://screenrant.com/star-trek-couples-unexpected-fan-art-redesigns/|archive-date=November 10, 2018}}</ref> Thompson praised Paris' attraction for Kes as "a good setup relationship to guide him into being a better and more responsible man for B'Elanna".<ref name="Source8" /> August believed Tuvok and Kes could be an ideal couple if he were not already married.<ref name="Source31" />


Kes's return in "Fury" was criticized as one of the worst moments in the ''Star Trek'' franchise.{{sfn|DeCandido|2021b}}{{sfn|Weyer|2018}} [[Keith DeCandido]], writing for [[Reactor (magazine)|''Reactor'']], considered the story to be insulting to the character{{sfn|DeCandido|2021b}}{{sfn|DeCandido|2021a}} and described the script and Lien's acting as lacking any "emotional content".{{sfn|DeCandido|2021a}} Michael Weyer of [[Comic Book Resources|''Comic Book Resources'']] believed that Kes deserved a better ending and disliked how she came back as "twisted monster whose actions can come off as a spoiled brat".{{sfn|Weyer|2018}} Fans were also critical of how the episode portrayed Kes.{{sfn|Weyer|2018}}{{sfn|Lee|2020|pp=93{{endash}}94}} ''Den of Geek''{{'}}s John Andrews had a more positive response to "Fury", referring to it as a "sad yet compelling character study".{{sfn|Andrews|2016}}
Critics had a mostly negative response to Kes' storyline for "Elogium". Commentators questioned the plausibility of an Ocampa woman only giving birth once as it would cause an inevitable decrease in the species population.<ref name="Book24">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Elogium2003|Jones & Parkin (2003)]]: p. 284</ref> Writer [[David A. McIntee]] criticized the elogium as a poorly-done metaphor for [[puberty]], [[PMS]], [[teenage pregnancy]], [[abortion]], and [[menopause]].<ref name="Book16">[[Kes (Star Trek)#McIntee2000|McIntee (2000)]]: pp. 56–60</ref> [[Bustle (magazine)|''Bustle'']]'s Marie Southard Ospina praised the episode's depiction of a woman choosing to not have a baby without receiving judgement.<ref name="Source5">{{cite web|url=https://www.bustle.com/articles/19733-5-lessons-star-trek-taught-me-about-being-an-interstellar-woman|title=5 Lessons 'Star Trek' Taught Me About Being an Interstellar Woman|last=Ospina|first=Marie Southard|date=April 7, 2014|work=[[Bustle (magazine)|Bustle]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160928025017/http://www.bustle.com/articles/19733-5-lessons-star-trek-taught-me-about-being-an-interstellar-woman|archive-date=September 28, 2016|df=mdy-all}}</ref> Kes' return for "Fury" also received negative feedback from reviewers who found her characterization to be disappointing.<ref name="Source4">{{cite web|url=https://www.denofgeek.com/us/tv/star-trek/258179/every-bryan-fuller-star-trek-episode-ever-ranked|title=Every Bryan Fuller Star Trek Episode Ever, Ranked|last=Andrews|first=John|date=September 20, 2016|work=[[Den of Geek!]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171013055716/http://www.denofgeek.com/us/tv/star-trek/258179/every-bryan-fuller-star-trek-episode-ever-ranked|archive-date=October 13, 2017|df=mdy-all}}</ref><ref name="Source9">{{cite web|url=https://screenrant.com/star-trek-voyager-biggest-problems-fans-choose-ignore/|title=Star Trek: 25 Things Wrong With Voyager Fans Choose To Ignore|last=August|first=Alexandra|date=August 13, 2018|website=[[Screen Rant]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180912135817/https://screenrant.com/star-trek-voyager-biggest-problems-fans-choose-ignore/|archive-date=September 12, 2018|df=mdy-all}}</ref> ''Den of Geek!''<nowiki/>'s John Andrews likened the episode to a "sad yet compelling character study", although he believed Kes' shift in morality was not believable.<ref name="Source4" /> August dislike the episode's version of Kes, describing it as "a ham-fisted way of undermining her entire journey after leaving ''Voyager''".<ref name="Source9" />


=== Analysis ===
== Notes ==
Kes' relationship with ''Voyager''<nowiki/>'s crew was the focus of academic discussion. [[Cultural studies]] scholar Debra Bonita Shaw wrote Janeway only accepts Kes, Neelix, and Seven of Nine as her subordinates; to gain Janeway's acceptance, these characters must adhere to an established "structure of command" and help ''Voyager'' return home.<ref name="Book17">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Shaw2006|Shaw (2006)]]: p. 79</ref> [[Media studies]] scholar Aviva Dove-Viebahn was critical of the portrayal of Kes and Neelix as similar to "native informants", a character type that she described as "[[Tokenism|token]] and subjugated". However, Dove-Viebahn clarified that Kes had agency through her mental abilities, which are portrayed as stronger than the crew's scientific and medical technology.<ref name="BookDove2">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Dove-Viebahn2007|Dove-Viebahn (2007)]]: p. 606</ref> [[English literature]] professor David Greven criticized Kes' relationship with Tuvok, writing their differences in race and age was too uncomfortably similar to [[Uncle Tom]]'s friendship with [[Little Eva (character)|Little Eva]] in the 1852 novel ''[[Uncle Tom's Cabin]]''.<ref name="Book23">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Greven2009|Greven (2009)]]: p. 106</ref>


{{Reflist|group=note}}
Scholars discussed her psionic powers in "Cold Fire". According to media studies scholar Marion Gymnich, the ''Star Trek'' franchise depicts telepathy with "infiltrations and mental intrusions". She cited Kes' loss of control in "Cold Fire" as an example of how ''Star Trek'' negatively portrays telepathic communication.<ref name="BookGymitch">[[Kes (Star Trek)#Gymnich2005|Gymnich (2005)]]: p. 70</ref> Analyzing the scene in which Kes boils Tuvok's blood, Greven wrote that he becomes a monster similar to those in ''[[Frankenstein]]'', ''[[The Phantom of the Opera (novel)|The Phantom of the Opera]]'', and [[The Monster (novella)|''The Monster'']]. Describing the sequence as one of the more disturbing in ''Star Trek'', Greven criticized the franchise for often changing "the differently-raced into monsters".<ref name="Book23" />


==References==
== References ==
=== Notes ===
{{notelist}}


===Citations===
=== Footnotes ===
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}


===Book sources===
=== Citations ===
{{refbegin|30em}}
{{Refbegin|colwidth=30em}}

*{{cite journal|last1=Dove-Viebahn|first1=Aviva|title=Embodying Hybridity, (En)gendering Community: Captain Janeway and the Enactment of a Feminist Heterotopia on ''Star Trek: Voyager''|journal=Women's Studies|volume=36|issue=8|year=2007|pages=597–618|doi=10.1080/00497870701683894|s2cid=143684284|ref=Dove-Viebahn2007}}
* {{cite web|url=https://www.denofgeek.com/us/tv/star-trek/258179/every-bryan-fuller-star-trek-episode-ever-ranked|title=Every Bryan Fuller ''Star Trek'' Episode Ever, Ranked|last=Andrews|first=John|date=September 20, 2016|work=[[Den of Geek]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171013055716/http://www.denofgeek.com/us/tv/star-trek/258179/every-bryan-fuller-star-trek-episode-ever-ranked|archive-date=October 13, 2017}}
*{{cite journal|last1=Greven|first1=David|title=The Fantastic Powers of the Other Sex: Male Mothers in Fantastic Fiction|journal=[[Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts]]|volume=14|issue=3|year=2003|pages=301–317|doi=|jstor=43308640 |s2cid=|ref=Greven2003|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/43308640}}
* {{cite book |last1 = Greven |first1 = David |title = Gender and Sexuality in Star Trek: Allegories of Desire in the Television Series and Films |year = 2009 |publisher = [[McFarland & Company]] |isbn = 978-0-7864-4413-7 |ref =Greven2009 }}
* {{Cite book|last1=Ayers|first1=Jeff|title=Voyages of Imagination: The Star Trek Fiction Companion|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|year=2006|isbn=9781416525486}}
* {{cite book |last1 = Gross |first1 = Edward |last2 = Altman |first2 = Mark A. |title = Captains' Logs: The Unauthorized Complete Trek Voyages |url = https://archive.org/details/captainslogsunau00gros |url-access = registration |year = 1995 |publisher = [[Little, Brown and Company]] |isbn = 978-1-8528-3899-7 |ref =GrossAltman1995 }}
* {{Cite book|last1=Barrett|first1=Duncan|author1-link=Duncan Barrett|last2=Barrett|first2=Michèle|url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Star_Trek/icnLDAAAQBAJ|title=Star Trek: The Human Frontier|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|year=2016|isbn=9781315516486|via=[[Google Books]]}}
* {{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-tampa-tribune/144102979/|title=''Voyager'' Approaching Black Hole?|last=Belcher|first=Walt|date=September 3, 1997|department=Television|work=[[The Tampa Tribune]]|page=6|access-date=March 26, 2024|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}
* {{cite book |last1 = Gross |first1 = Edward |last2 = Altman |first2 = Mark A. |title =Captains' Logs Supplemental: The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages |url = https://archive.org/details/captainslogssupp0000gros |url-access = registration |year = 1996 |publisher =[[Little, Brown and Company]] |isbn =978-0-671-00206-0 |ref = GrossAltman1996 }}
* {{cite web|url=https://scholar.lib.vt.edu/VA-news/VA-Pilot/issues/1997/vp970904/09040078.htm|title=Fresh Faces for Fall Jeri Ryan ''Star Trek'' Character is One on Many Changes in Store|last=Bonko|first=Larry|date=September 4, 1997|work=[[The Virginian-Pilot]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191116082212/https://scholar.lib.vt.edu/VA-news/VA-Pilot/issues/1997/vp970904/09040078.htm|archive-date=November 16, 2019|via=[[Virginia Tech]]}}
*{{cite book |last1=Gymnich |first= Marion |chapter= Exploring Inner Spaces: Authoritative Narratives and Subjective Worlds in ''Star Trek: Deep Space Nine'', ''Voyager'' and ''Enterprise'' |title=Narrative Strategies in Television Series |url=https://archive.org/details/narrativestrateg00allr |url-access=limited |editor-last1 = Allrath |editor-first1 = G. |editor-last2 = Gymnich |editor-first2 = M. |year = 2005 |publisher =[[Palgrave Macmillan]]|pages= [https://archive.org/details/narrativestrateg00allr/page/n74 62]–79 |isbn = 978-1-349-54505-6 |ref = Gymnich2005}}
* {{cite AV media|chapter=Braving the Unknown: Season Four|title=Star Trek Voyager – The Complete Fourth Season|date=September 28, 2004|publisher=[[Paramount Television|Paramount]]|medium=DVD|ref={{sfnref|"Braving the Unknown: Season Four"|2004}}}}
* {{cite book |last1 = Jones |first1 = Mark |last2 = Parkin |first2 = Lance |title =Beyond the Final Frontier: An Unauthorised Review of the Trek Universe on Television and Film ; Season Summaries, Characters, Episodes, Movies |year = 2003 |publisher =[[Contender Entertainment Group]] |isbn =1843570807|ref = Elogium2003 }}
* {{cite web|url=https://www.denofgeek.com/books/which-star-trek-books-are-canon/|title=Which ''Star Trek'' Books Are Canon?|last=Britt|first=Ryan|date=February 23, 2021|work=[[Den of Geek]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230924001028/https://www.denofgeek.com/books/which-star-trek-books-are-canon/|archive-date=September 24, 2023}}
* {{cite book |last = McIntee |first = David|title = Delta Quadrant - The Unofficial Guide to Voyager |year = 2000 |publisher = Virgin Books|isbn =0-7535-0436-7|ref = McIntee2000}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Consalvo|first1=Mia|author-link=Mia Consalvo|title=Borg Babes, Drones, and The Collective: Reading Gender and the Body in ''Star Trek''|journal=[[Women's Studies in Communication]]|publisher=[[Taylor & Francis]]|issue=2|volume=27|year=2004|pages=177{{endash}}203|doi=10.1080/07491409.2004.10162472|via=Taylor & Francis Online}}
* {{cite book |last = Poe |first = Stephan Edward|title = A Vision of the Future |year = 1998 |publisher = [[Simon and Schuster]] |isbn =978-0-671-53481-3|ref = Poe1998}}
* {{cite web|url=https://reactormag.com/star-trek-voyager-rewatch-before-and-after/|title=''Star Trek: Voyager'' Rewatch: 'Before and After'|last=DeCandido|first=Keith|author-link=Keith DeCandido|date=August 31, 2020|work=[[Reactor (magazine)|Reactor]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240325192211/https://reactormag.com/star-trek-voyager-rewatch-before-and-after/|archive-date=March 25, 2024}}
* {{cite book |last1 = Rehak |first1 = Bob |title = More Than Meets the Eye: Special Effects and the Fantastic Transmedia Franchise |year = 2018 |publisher = [[New York University Press]] |isbn =978-1-479-81315-5|ref = Rehak2018}}
* {{cite web|url=https://reactormag.com/star-trek-voyager-rewatch-fury/|title=''Star Trek: Voyager'' Rewatch: 'Fury'|last=DeCandido|first=Keith|author-link=Keith DeCandido|date=July 12, 2021a|work=[[Reactor (magazine)|Reactor]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240325205926/https://reactormag.com/star-trek-voyager-rewatch-fury/|archive-date=March 25, 2024}}
* {{cite book |last = Ruditis |first = Paul|title = Star Trek Voyager Companion |year = 2003 |publisher = [[Simon and Schuster]] |isbn =978-0-7434-1751-8|ref = Ruditis2003}}
* {{cite web|url=https://reactormag.com/star-trek-voyager-rewatch-sixth-season-overview/|title=''Star Trek: Voyager'' Rewatch: Sixth Season Overview|last=DeCandido|first=Keith|author-link=Keith DeCandido|date=July 16, 2021b|work=[[Reactor (magazine)|Reactor]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240330003803/https://reactormag.com/star-trek-voyager-rewatch-sixth-season-overview/|archive-date=March 30, 2024}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Shaw|first1=Debra Bonita|title=Sex and the Single Starship Captain: Compulsory Heterosexuality and ''Star Trek: Voyager''|journal=[[Femspec]]|volume=7|issue=1|year=2006|pages=66–85,155|ref=Shaw2006}}
* {{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/tampa-bay-times/144102531/|title=''Star Trek'' Dynasty Slipping|last=Deggans|first=Eric|date=August 31, 1997|department=Floridian|work=[[Tampa Bay Times]]|pages= 1F, 5F|access-date=March 26, 2024|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}
{{refend}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[Darkling (Star Trek: Voyager)|Darkling]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Alexander Singer]], Story: [[Brannon Braga]] and [[Joe Menosky]], Teleplay: Joe Menosky|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=February 19, 1997|season=3|ref={{sfnref|"Darkling"|1997}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[Before and After (Star Trek: Voyager)|Before and After]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: Allan Kroeker, Writer: [[Kenneth Biller]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=April 9, 1997|season=3|ref={{sfnref|"Before and After"|1997}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[The Gift (Star Trek: Voyager)|The Gift]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Anson Williams]], Writer: [[Joe Menosky]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=September 10, 1997|season=[[Star Trek: Voyager season 4|4]]|ref={{sfnref|"The Gift"|1997}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=Voyage(r) to the Delta Quadrant|series=The Center Seat: 55 Years of Star Trek|author=Director: [[Brian Volk-Weiss]].|network=[[History Channel]]|season=1|url=https://www.peacocktv.com/watch/asset/tv/the-center-seat-55-years-of-star-trek/4646751659604941112|airdate=February 20, 2022|via=[[Peacock (streaming service)|Peacock]]|url-access=subscription|ref={{sfnref|''The Center Seat: 55 Years of Star Trek''|2022}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[Cold Fire (Star Trek: Voyager)|Cold Fire]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Cliff Bole]], Story: Anthony Williams, Teleplay: [[Brannon Braga]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=November 13, 1995|season=2|ref={{sfnref|"Cold Fire"|1995}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[Warlord (Star Trek: Voyager)|Warlord]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[David Livingston (director)|David Livingston]], Story: Andrew Shepard Price and Mark Gaberman, Teleplay: Lisa Klink|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=November 20, 1996|season=3|ref={{sfnref|"Warlord"|1996}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[Scorpion, Part I]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[David Livingston (director)|David Livingston]], Writer: [[Brannon Braga]] and [[Joe Menosky]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=May 21, 1997|season=3|ref={{sfnref|"Scorpion, Part I"|1997}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[Parallax (Star Trek: Voyager)|Parallax]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Kim Friedman]], Story: Jim Trombetta, Teleplay: [[Brannon Braga]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=January 23, 1995|season=1|ref={{sfnref|"Parallax"|1995}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[Twisted (Star Trek: Voyager)|Twisted]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Kim Friedman]], Story: Arnold Rudnick and [[Rich Hosek]], Teleplay: [[Kenneth Biller]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=October 2, 1995|season=2|ref={{sfnref|"Twisted"|1995}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[Persistence of Vision (Star Trek: Voyager)|Persistence of Vision]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[James L. Conway]], Writer: [[Jeri Taylor]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=October 30, 1995|season=2|ref={{sfnref|"Persistence of Vision"|1995}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[Fury (Star Trek: Voyager)|Fury]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[John Bruno (director)|John Bruno]], Story: [[Rick Berman]] and [[Brannon Braga]], Teleplay: [[Bryan Fuller]] and [[Michael Taylor (screenwriter)|Michael Taylor]]|date=May 3, 2000|network=[[UPN]]|ref={{sfnref|"Fury"|2000}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[Parturition (Star Trek: Voyager)|Parturition]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Jonathan Frakes]], Writer: Thomas E. Szollosi|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=October 9, 1995|season=2|ref={{sfnref|"Parturition"|1995}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[Time and Again (Star Trek: Voyager)|Time and Again]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Les Landau]], Story: [[David Kemper (writer)|David Kemper]], Teleplay: David Kemper and [[Michael Piller]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=January 30, 1995|season=1|ref={{sfnref|"Time and Again"|1995}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[Sacred Ground (Star Trek: Voyager)|Sacred Ground]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Robert Duncan McNeill]], Story: Geo Cameron, Teleplay: Lisa Klink|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=October 30, 1996|season=3|ref={{sfnref|"Sacred Ground"|1996}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[Caretaker (Star Trek: Voyager)|Caretaker]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Winrich Kolbe]], Story: [[Rick Berman]], [[Michael Piller]], and [[Jeri Taylor]], Teleplay: Michael Piller and Jeri Taylor|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=January 16, 1995|season=1|ref={{sfnref|"Caretaker"|1995}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[Phage (Star Trek: Voyager)|Phage]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Winrich Kolbe]], Story: Timothy De Haas, and Teleplay: [[Brannon Braga]] and Skye Dent|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=February 6, 1995|season=1|ref={{sfnref|"Phage"|1995}}}}
* {{cite episode|title=[[Elogium (Star Trek: Voyager)|Elogium]]|series=[[Star Trek: Voyager]]|credits=Director: [[Winrich Kolbe]], Story: [[Jimmy Diggs]] and Steve J. Kay, Teleplay: [[Kenneth Biller]] and [[Jeri Taylor]]|network=[[UPN]]|airdate=September 18, 1995|season=2|ref={{sfnref|"Elogium"|1995}}}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Dove-Viebahn|first1=Aviva|title=Embodying Hybridity, (En)gendering Community: Captain Janeway and the Enactment of a Feminist Heterotopia on ''Star Trek: Voyager''|journal=Women's Studies|publisher=[[Taylor & Francis]]|issue=8|year=2007|pages=597{{endash}}618|doi=10.1080/00497870701683894|via=Taylor & Francis Online}}
* {{Cite book|editor-last1=Garcia-Siino|editor-first1=Leimar|editor-last2=Mittermeier|editor-first2=Sabrina|editor-last3=Rabitsch|editor-first3=Stefan|last=Garcia-Siino|first=Leimar|title=The Routledge Handbook of Star Trek|chapter=''Star Trek: Voyager''|pages=46{{endash}}55|url=https://www.routledge.com/The-Routledge-Handbook-of-Star-Trek/Garcia-Siino-Mittermeier-Rabitsch/p/book/9780367366674|publisher=[[Routledge]]|year=2022|isbn=9780367366674}}
* {{Cite book|last1=Gross|first1=Edward|last2=Altman|first2=Mark A.|author2-link=Mark A. Altman|url=https://archive.org/details/captainslogsunau00gros|url-access=registration|title=Captains' Logs: The Unauthorized Complete Trek Voyages|publisher=[[Little, Brown and Company]]|year=1995|isbn=9780316329576|via=[[Internet Archive]]}}
* {{Cite book|last1=Gross|first1=Edward|last2=Altman|first2=Mark A.|author2-link=Mark A. Altman|url=https://archive.org/details/captainslogssupp0000gros|url-access=registration|title=Captains' Logs Supplemental: The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages|publisher=[[Little, Brown and Company]]|year=1996|isbn=9780316329200|via=[[Internet Archive]]}}
* {{Cite book|editor-last1=Allrath|editor-first1=Gaby|editor-last2=Gymnich|editor-first2=Marion|last1=Gymnich|first1=Marion|pages=62{{endash}}79|chapter=Exploring Inner Spaces: Authoritative Narratives and Subjective Worlds in ''Star Trek: Deep Space Nine'', ''Voyager'' and ''Enterprise''|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9781403996053/page/62/mode/2u|title=Narrative Strategies in Television Series|publisher=[[Palgrave Macmillan]]|year=2005|isbn=9780230501003|via=[[Internet Archive]]}}
* {{cite web|url=https://www.denofgeek.com/tv/star-trek-voyager/25477/why-star-trek-voyagers-fourth-season-is-the-best|title=Why ''Star Trek: Voyager''{{’}}s Fourth Season Is the Best|last=Harrisson|first=Juliette|date=May 10, 2013|work=[[Den of Geek]]|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130607142432/https://www.denofgeek.com/tv/star-trek-voyager/25477/why-star-trek-voyagers-fourth-season-is-the-best|archive-date=June 7, 2013}}
* {{cite web|url=https://www.denofgeek.com/us/tv/star-trek/270646/10-great-backwards-tv-episodes|title=10 Great Backwards TV Episodes|last=Harrisson|first=Juliette|date=February 1, 2018|work=[[Den of Geek!]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180410022110/http://www.denofgeek.com/us/tv/star-trek/270646/10-great-backwards-tv-episodes|archive-date=April 10, 2018}}
* {{cite web|url=https://www.denofgeek.com/tv/star-trek-is-finally-getting-romance-right/|title=''Star Trek'' Is Finally Getting Romance Right|last=Harrisson|first=Juliette|date=
February 14, 2023|work=[[Den of Geek!]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230215055606/https://www.denofgeek.com/tv/star-trek-is-finally-getting-romance-right/|archive-date=February 15, 2023}}
* {{Cite book|last1=Heath|first1=K. M.|last2=Carlisle|first2=A. S.|url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Voyages_of_Star_Trek/-Xr_DwAAQBAJ|title=The Voyages of Star Trek: A Mirror on American Society Through Time|publisher=[[Rowman & Littlefield]]|year=2020|isbn=9781538136973|via=[[Google Books]]}}
* {{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-akron-beacon-journal/144103363/|title=Seven of Nine May Transport Nine out of 10 Trekkie Fans|last=Heldenfels|first=R.D.|date=September 2, 1997|department=It's On|work=|page=B7, B8|access-date=March 26, 2024|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}
* {{cite web|url=https://www.avclub.com/the-late-greats-18-plus-tv-characters-who-buoyed-shows-1798284242/slides/11|title= The Late Greats: 18-Plus TV Characters Who Buoyed Shows Midstream|last=Hughes|first=William|date=August 31, 2015|work=[[The A.V. Club]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171026084101/https://tv.avclub.com/the-late-greats-18-plus-tv-characters-who-buoyed-shows-1798284242|archive-date=October 26, 2017}}
* {{cite magazine|last=Kutzera|first=Dale|title=''Voyager'' Episode Guide|magazine=[[Cinefantastique]]|date=November 1996|volume=28|issue=4/5|pages=76{{endash}}107|url=https://archive.org/stream/cinefantastique_1970-2002/Cinefantastique%20Vol%2028%20No%204-5%20%28Nov%201996%29_djvu.txt|via=[[Internet Archive]]}}
* {{Cite book|editor-last1=Lively|editor-first1=Robert L.|last1=Lee|first1=Peter W.Y.|pages=82{{endash}}97|chapter=Millennial Girlhood and the End of Kes|url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Exploring_Star_Trek_Voyager/ounaDwAAQBAJ|title=Exploring Star Trek: Voyager: Critical Essays|publisher=[[McFarland & Company]]|year=2020|isbn=9781476678214|via=[[Google Books]]}}
* {{cite interview|last=Lien|first=Jennifer|subject-link=Jennifer Lien|title=Catching Up with Jennifer Lien|publisher=[[StarTrek.com]]|date=August 9, 2010|url=https://www.startrek.com/news/catching-up-with-jennifer-lien|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180728040127/http://www.startrek.com/article/catching-up-with-jennifer-lien|archive-date=July 28, 2018}}
* {{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-toronto-star/144102311/|title=Fall TV Preview|last=Mietkiewicz|first=Henry|date=July 11, 1997a|department=Entertainment|work=[[Toronto Star]]|page=B10|access-date=March 26, 2024|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}
* {{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-toronto-star/144103144/|title=Borgs Give ''Star Trek'' a Jolt|last=Mietkiewicz|first=Henry|date=September 3, 1997b|department=Entertainment|work=[[Toronto Star]]|page=D2|access-date=March 26, 2024|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}
* {{Cite book|last1=Okuda|first1=Michael|author1-link=Michael Okuda|last2=Okuda|first2=Denise|author2-link=Denise Okuda|last3=Mirek|first3=Debbie|url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Star_Trek_Encyclopedia/cbYf2l7gczUC|title=The Star Trek Encyclopedia|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|year=2011|isbn=9781451646887|via=[[Google Books]]}}
* {{cite web|url=https://www.bustle.com/articles/19733-5-lessons-star-trek-taught-me-about-being-an-interstellar-woman|title=5 Lessons ''Star Trek'' Women Taught Me|last=Ospina|first=Marie Southard|date=April 7, 2014|work=[[Bustle (magazine)|Bustle]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140829171024/https://www.bustle.com/articles/19733-5-lessons-star-trek-taught-me-about-being-an-interstellar-woman|archive-date=August 29, 2014}}
* {{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-town-talk/144102603/|title=''Star Trek'': Boldly Fighting for Viewers|last=Owen|first=Rob|author-link=Rob Owen (journalist)|date=September 14, 1997|department=Channels|work=Town Talk|agency=[[Albany Times Union]]|page=5|access-date=March 26, 2024|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}
* {{cite web|url=http://www.startrek.com/news/newsarchive.asp?ID=111625|title=Spotlight: Jennifer Lien Returns as Kes|last=Patel Jr.|first=Manny|date=May 1, 2000|publisher=[[StarTrek.com]]|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20001208110100/http://www.startrek.com/news/newsarchive.asp?ID=111625|archive-date=December 8, 2000}}
* {{cite web|url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2004/10/15/star-trek-voyager-season-four|title=''Star Trek Voyager'': Season Four|last=Patrizio|first=Andy|date=October 15, 2004|work=[[IGN]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171128202059/https://www.ign.com/articles/2004/10/15/star-trek-voyager-season-four|archive-date=November 28, 2017}}
* {{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/st-louis-post-dispatch/144391055/|title=''Voyager'' is Set to Give Way to Next Generation of ''Star Trek''|last=Pennington|first=Gail|date=May 24, 2001|department=Television|work=[[St. Louis Post-Dispatch]]|page=F1, F2|access-date=March 29, 2024|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}
* {{Cite book|last1=Poe|first1=Stephen Edward|url=https://archive.org/details/startrekvoyagerv0000poes/mode/2up|url-access=registration|title=A Vision of the Future|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|year=1998|isbn=9780671534813|via=[[Internet Archive]]}}
* {{cite web|url=http://www.gizmodo.co.uk/2017/09/dont-forget-every-star-trek-series-had-a-terrible-first-season|title=Don't Forget, Every ''Star Trek'' Series Had a Terrible First Season|last=Pritchard|first=Tom|date=September 22, 2017|work=[[Gizmodo]]|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180504190924/http://www.gizmodo.co.uk/2017/09/dont-forget-every-star-trek-series-had-a-terrible-first-season|archive-date=May 4, 2018}}
* {{Cite book|last1=Robinson|first1=Ben|last2=Wright|first2=Mark|title=Star Trek Voyager: A Celebration|publisher=Hero Collector|year=2020|isbn=9781858756141}}
* {{Cite book|last1=Ruditis|first1=Paul|author1-link=Paul Ruditis|url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Star_Trek_Voyager_Companion/oEPl84FQpxgC|title=Star Trek Voyager Companion|publisher=[[Pocket Books]]|year=2003|isbn=9780743417518|via=[[Google Books]]}}
* {{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-philadelphia-inquirer-star-trek-voy/75378999/|title=Venturing into Space with a New ''Star Trek''|last=Storm|first=Jonathan|date=January 16, 1995|department=Television|work=[[The Philadelphia Inquirer]]|page=E1, E6|access-date=May 5, 2024|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}
* {{Cite book|editor-last1=Lively|editor-first1=Robert L.|last1=Tembo|first1=Kwasu David|pages=15{{endash}}31|chapter='Far From Gay Cities and the Ways of Men': Exploring Wandering and Homecoming in ''The Odyssey'' and ''Star Trek: Voyager''|url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Exploring_Star_Trek_Voyager/ounaDwAAQBAJ|title=Exploring Star Trek: Voyager: Critical Essays|publisher=[[McFarland & Company]]|year=2020|isbn=9781476678214|via=[[Google Books]]}}
* {{cite web|url=https://www.startrek.com/news/star-trek-voyager-kes-best-moments|title=5 Great Kes Moments From ''Star Trek: Voyager''|last=Ulster|first=Laurie|date=May 14, 2020|publisher=[[StarTrek.com]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200604044432/https://www.startrek.com/news/star-trek-voyager-kes-best-moments|archive-date=June 4, 2020}}
* {{cite web|url=https://www.startrek.com/article/ten-for-ward-5-undefined-10-trek-novels-the-canon-passed-over|title=Ten for Ward #5 – 10 ''Trek'' Novels 'the Canon' Passed Over|first=Dayton|last=Ward|date=August 3, 2012|publisher=[[StarTrek.com]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191105223443/https://www.startrek.com/article/ten-for-ward-5-undefined-10-trek-novels-the-canon-passed-over|archive-date=November 5, 2019}}
* {{cite web|url=https://www.cbr.com/star-trek-episodes-bad-must-watch/|title=''Star Trek'': 20 Episodes So Bad They Must Be Seen|last=Weyer|first=Michael|date=December 12, 2018|work=[[Comic Book Resources]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181213125346/https://www.cbr.com/star-trek-episodes-bad-must-watch/|archive-date=December 13, 2018}}
* {{Cite book|editor-last1=Garcia-Siino|editor-first1=Leimar|editor-last2=Mittermeier|editor-first2=Sabrina|editor-last3=Rabitsch|editor-first3=Stefan|last=Wrigley|first=Sylvia Spruck|author-link=Sylvia Spruck Wrigley|pages=421{{endash}}429|title=The Routledge Handbook of Star Trek|chapter=Age and Aging|url=https://www.routledge.com/The-Routledge-Handbook-of-Star-Trek/Garcia-Siino-Mittermeier-Rabitsch/p/book/9780367366674|publisher=[[Routledge]]|year=2022|isbn=9780367366674}}

{{Refend}}


==External links==
==External links==
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[[Category:Child characters in television]]
[[Category:Child characters in television]]
[[Category:Female characters in television]]
[[Category:Female characters in television]]
[[Category:Fictional characters with precognition]]
[[Category:Fictional health professionals]]
[[Category:Fictional characters from the 24th century]]
[[Category:Fictional characters from the 24th century]]
[[Category:Fictional characters with precognition]]
[[Category:Fictional female health professionals]]
[[Category:Fictional horticulturists and gardeners]]
[[Category:Fictional telepaths]]
[[Category:Fictional telepaths]]
[[Category:Starfleet medical personnel]]
[[Category:Star Trek alien characters]]
[[Category:Star Trek alien characters]]
[[Category:Starfleet medical personnel]]
[[Category:Star Trek: Voyager characters]]
[[Category:Star Trek: Voyager characters]]
[[Category:Television characters introduced in 1995]]
[[Category:Television characters introduced in 1995]]

Revision as of 03:19, 8 May 2024

Kes
Star Trek character
Jennifer Lien pictured in costume as Kes for a promotional shoot
Jennifer Lien as Kes
First appearance"Caretaker" (1995)
Last appearance"Fury" (2000)
Portrayed byJennifer Lien
In-universe information
SpeciesOcampa
AffiliationStarfleet
Family
  • Benaren (father)
  • Martis (mother)
Children
  • None (canon timeline)
  • Linnis (alternate timeline)
PostingUSS Voyager (field posting)
Position
RankUnassigned rank
Partner

Kes is a fictional character played by Jennifer Lien on the American science fiction television show Star Trek: Voyager. She is a member of a telepathic alien species known as the Ocampa who have latent psychic abilities and a life span of only nine years. Joining the starship USS Voyager's crew in the pilot episode "Caretaker", she opens a hydroponics garden and works as the medical assistant to a hologram known as the Doctor. Her storylines focus on encouraging the Doctor to develop his humanity and dealing with her Talaxian boyfriend Neelix's jealousy. She also seeks to expand upon her mental capabilities, leaving in the fourth season after her powers threaten to destroy the ship. She reappears in a season six episode and features in Star Trek: Voyager novels and short stories.

Voyager's creators Rick Berman, Michael Piller, and Jeri Taylor designed Kes to be a rapidly-aging character who would provide audiences with a different perspective on time. Although Kes is portrayed as fragile and innocent, she is also shown as having a hidden strength and maturity. Voyager's producers reluctantly fired Lien after her personal issues affected her reliability on set. At the time, this was not openly discussed and various other reasons were attributed to her departure; these ranged from Lien voluntarily leaving to pursue other roles to her being removed to make room for Jeri Ryan's introduction as Seven of Nine.

Some critics praised Lien's removal from Voyager, criticizing Kes as boring and without a clear purpose, while others were more disappointed by this casting change. Kes's age was discussed by reviewers who felt she was too young to be dating Neelix. Her return in the season six episode "Fury" was criticized as one of the worst moments in the Star Trek franchise. Academics have analyzed Kes based on her representation of femininity, particularly in the context of the 1990s, as well as the development of her mental abilities.

Development

Creation and casting

Kes was one of the first nine characters that Star Trek: Voyager creators Rick Berman, Michael Piller, and Jeri Taylor developed for the crew of the USS Voyager starship.[1][2] Inspired by the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "The Child", Berman, Piller, and Taylor wanted to feature a rapidly-aging character to encourage viewers to reflect on time.[3][4] Early in production, they nicknamed Kes Mayfly to reference how her alien species—the Ocampa—have a short life span.[5][6] She was set to age a year at the midpoint each season to emphasize this rapid age progression.[7] Early drafts had Kes named Dah and portrayed her with an older Ocampa near the end of his life cycle.[2][8]

In initial character descriptions, Kes was listed as a potential scout and expert on gangs,[7] but was changed to be a medical intern,[2] and another character—Neelix—assumed a similar role as a guide.[9] When Berman, Piller, and Taylor wrote Kes with psychic powers, production assistant Zayra Cabot hired a paranormal-focused consulting firm, the Joan Pearce Research Associates, to help research parapsychology.[6] Based on these findings, Kes was shown with limited telepathy in the pilot episode ("Caretaker") with further exploration of her power planned for later episodes.[10]

A photograph of Jennifer Lien
Jennifer Lien (pictured in 1996) plays Kes.

Early in Voyager's development, it was undetermined if Kes would be female, male, or androgynous.[5] The later casting call was only for women in their early-twenties or younger. "Caretaker" director Winrich Kolbe wanted an actress who "could be fragile but with a steely will underneath".[11] Jennifer Lien was an "early selection" for the role;[12] Taylor said that she had "this wonderful elfin quality" and projected vulnerability and strength in her audition.[4] Lien was unfamiliar with the Star Trek franchise, and at the age of nineteen, she was the youngest actor on the show at the time of its debut.[12] Jennifer Gatti was considered as a runner-up for Kes, and would later guest star in the episode "Non Sequitur".[13]

For the pilot, Robert Blackman designed Kes's wardrobe and Michael Westmore created her prosthetic makeup.[14] Blackman had difficulty dressing Lien as Voyager's producers were unclear of her character's direction. His initial design was for a pastel-colored costume inspired by a sprite, and after that was rejected, the final costume was instead partially inspired by Joan of Arc.[15] Kes's wardrobe primarily consisted of tunics, and Lien wore a bob cut wig.[16][17] Lien tested combinations of wigs and prosthetics, which cinematographer Marvin V. Rush filmed for Berman's final approval.[18] Westmore kept the prosthetic simple to more easily work on 30 Ocampa characters in one episode.[19] Lien said the ear prosthetics impaired her hearing,[16] and she developed an allergic response to them as the series progressed.[17][20] Starting with the episode "Before and After", Lien no longer wore the prosthetics and used her longer hair to cover her ears and hide this change;[17][20] around this point, her costume also transitioned to being tighter jumpsuits.[21]

Characterization and relationships

In Voyager's series bible, Kes is characterized as "an innocent who sees humanity through a fresh perspective" and as "delicate, beautiful, young".[4] The "Caretaker" script describes her as a "dazzling, ethereal beauty, waifish and fragile" who has a "dignity to her bearing, an alertness in her look, that suggests a being of powerful intelligence".[22] While promoting Voyager, Lien said that Kes lacked any "cynicism or precociousness or pretentiousness or sarcasm", and believed this separated her from the typical roles for young women.[23] Taylor defined the character through her curiosity as demonstrated by how she challenges the Ocampa's beliefs and explores her mental abilities.[24] In 2003, author Paul Ruditis wrote that Kes has a "fragile power" and balances a "child-like wonder" with a "maturity of someone well into adulthood".[22]

Kes and Neelix were created as an alien couple who would learn about humanity together.[25] They are portrayed as an unlikely pair in age and appearance,[26] with Kes as the dominant partner keeping Neelix out of trouble.[27] Kes and Neelix are shown sleeping in separate bedrooms, and their sex lives are left vague. Taylor said this was done to avoid potentially offending viewers, particularly families with young children and those against cohabitation.[28] Taylor and Berman also worried that Kes was too young to show in a sexual relationship.[29] In retrospect, writers and producers felt Kes and Neelix never worked as a couple;[25] a break-up scene was filmed for the episode "Fair Trade", but was cut due to time constraints.[25][27]

In Voyager's first two seasons, Kes is involved in a love triangle with Neelix and Voyager's helmsman Tom Paris. Neelix becomes increasingly jealous over Paris's interest in Kes who never returns his advances.[25] None of the actors involved liked this storyline,[25] which was ended to avoid further damaging Neelix and Paris as characters.[30][31] Aside from Neelix, Kes spent most of her scenes with a hologram known as the Doctor; she was key to helping him develop his humanity and persuading the crew to view him as more than just a machine.[32] Along with this, the Doctor teaches Kes about medicine and Security Chief Tuvok helps her to further develop her mental abilities. She is respectful to the Doctor and Captain Kathryn Janeway, who she sees as parental figures.[22]

Departure and return

In the fourth season, Voyager's producers reluctantly fired Lien when her personal issues affected her reliability on set.[33] She had become increasingly unfocused, requiring multiple takes to complete a scene.[34] Robert Duncan McNeill, who plays Paris, described Lien as private and shy,[35] and Taylor said that she refused to discuss or accept help for her problems.[33] The cast and crew did not publicly disclose the reason for Lien's firing.[36] At the time, it was believed Lien was removed to make room for Jeri Ryan as former Borg drone Seven of Nine,[37] but these casting choices were unrelated.[38] Paramount reported that Lien wanted to act in other projects,[39] and Taylor said Kes "did not work out as well as we wanted".[40][41] In 2004, writer Kenneth Biller talked about his disappointment about Kes's removal:

I was a little bit regretful when Kes left the show, because I thought she was an interesting character to write for—from a science fiction standpoint—because she had certain... she had telepathic abilities, she had this very compressed lifespan, she had things about her character that often lent themselves to interesting storytelling [....] We lost something in losing the Kes character.[42]

UPN executives wanted Kes cut from Voyager off-screen without explanation, but Taylor insisted that the character get a proper farewell.[34] Lien last appears as a full-time cast member in "The Gift". It was intended to be the fifth episode of the fourth season, but was moved to the second after a decision was made to remove Lien earlier than planned.[43] She had a final appearance in the season six episode, "Fury".[33][44] Berman asked her to come back before a story was completed.[44] Lien discussed the script with Fuller and Michael Taylor to ensure that Kes was "handled with great care". Her primary request was for the character to be dramatically different than how she left.[16] In a 2010 StarTrek.com interview, Lien said she preferred "The Gift" as her final episode; she disliked her performance in "Fury", explaining that she had not acted for an extended period and struggled with playing such a different version of Kes.[45]

Appearances

In Star Trek: Voyager

Kes is an Ocampa—a telepathic alien species with latent psychic abilities and a life span of only nine years.[46] She was born and raised in an underground city on the Ocampa home world, which was constructed by an alien known as the Caretaker after he inadvertently destroyed the planet's atmosphere. The Ocampa grow dependent on his care and are sealed from the planet's surface; despite this, Kes dreams of exploring the galaxy and her mental powers. She finds a way out of the city, but is captured and tortured by the Kazon, who want to steal the Ocampa's resources. Neelix, a Talaxian, rescues her and they become a couple.[47]

The Caretaker realizes he is dying and abducts beings from across the galaxy to find a compatible mate to produce an offspring who would continue caring for the Ocampa; this includes a Maquis crew and the Starfleet crew of the starship USS Voyager. Kes helps Captain Kathryn Janeway and Chakotay recover their missing crew members. When the Kazon attack and attempt to steal the Caretaker's technology, Janeway orders the destruction of his vessel. Stranded in the Delta Quadrant, she integrates the Maquis into her Starfleet crew and agrees to have Kes and Neelix remain on Voyager.[47]

Aboard Voyager, Kes starts a hydroponics garden to provide produce to the crew.[48] She works as the Doctor's medical assistant while encouraging him to develop his social skills and the crew to recognize him as more than a hologram.[32] The Vidiians harvest Neelix's lungs in "Phage", and Kes donates one of her own for him.[49] In "Elogium", emanations from space-dwelling lifeforms cause Kes to prematurely enter a fertile period.[note 1] An Ocampa goes through this process only once and it is her only time to have a child. After discussions, Neelix agrees to be a father, but Kes decides against having a child. When Voyager moves away from the aliens, the Doctor determines Kes had a false alarm and would be able to conceive in the future.[50] Neelix grows more paranoid regarding Paris's interest in Kes, such as in "Twisted";[31] the two resolve this tension in "Parturition" while nursing a reptilian humanoid baby during an away mission.[31][53]

When Voyager discovers an Ocampa colony in "Cold Fire", its leader Tanis teaches Kes to see and control particles on the subatomic level. Prior to this, Tuvok had been training Kes with more caution.[54] She used her abilities in earlier episodes, including having visions of a planet's destruction in "Time and Again" and resisting a psychoactive trance in "Persistence of Vision".[55][56] Under Tanis's tutelage, Kes develops pyrokinesis, but cannot control it, nearly kills Tuvok by boiling his blood. The crew discover that Tanis is working with the Caretaker's first mate, Suspiria, to destroy Voyager, but Kes subdues him with her powers. Tuvok encourages her to learn to control, rather than fear, her darker impulses.[54] In "Warlord", Tiernan, a former dictator of the planet Illari, possesses and uses her abilities to stage a coup on the new leader. Under his influence, Kes breaks up with Neelix. Although Voyager frees Kes from Tieran's control and kills him, the experience traumatizes her.[57]

Kes is shocked into a coma by a force field protecting a holy site in "Sacred Ground". Janeway cures her by undergoing a religious ceremony to learn she must rely on her own faith rather than technology.[58] In "Darkling", Kes is attracted to Zahir, a part of an alien species of explorers, and considers temporarily joining his journey. The Doctor injures Zahir and kidnaps Kes after developing an evil alter ego while grafting new personalities into his program. After the Doctor is returned to normal, Kes decides to remain on Voyager.[52] Throughout "Before and After", Kes lives short periods of her life in reverse order, from her death to her conception. Set in an alternative timeline, she is romantically involved with Paris and has a daughter who is married to and has a son with Ensign Harry Kim. In this time, Kes participates in Voyager’s year-long battle with the Krenim, later shown in “Year of Hell”. The Doctor brings her back to the present, and Tuvok says likely saw only a possible timeline and her actions may have changed the future.[59]

During "Scorpion", Kes becomes telepathically connected with Species 8472 who are at war with the Borg.[60] Her powers advance at an exponential rate in “The Gift” to the point that she can no longer stay aboard Voyager as they threaten to destroy the ship. Leaving on a shuttlecraft, Kes hurls Voyager and its crew safely beyond Borg space, 9,500 light-years closer to Earth, before turning into living energy.[61] She returns in “Fury” in which she has memory loss as she nears the end of her life cycle. She believes Janeway had kidnapped her from Ocampa and travels back in time to negotiate with the Vidiians to take her younger self home in return for helping them access Voyager to harvest the crew’s organs. After this is stopped, the younger Kes makes a hologram to remind her future self about her love for the crew. The older Kes sees this and returns to Ocampa.[62]

Other appearances

In 1995, Pocket Books began publishing Star Trek: Voyager novels about stories set during the show's run and after its series finale.[63][64][note 2] Kes appears in the 1995 novelization of "Caretaker" by L. A. Graf and the 1996 one for "Flashback" by Diane Carey.[67] Nathan Archer began writing the 1995 book, Ragnorak, before the pilot episode aired and said that how he had imagined Kes based on the series bible was radically different from her depiction in the show.[64] In Greg Cox's 1997 novel, The Black Shore, Kes has horrific visions after the crew takes shore leave on a seemingly idyllic planet. Cox included scenes between Kes and Chief Engineer B'Elanna Torres after reading an interview in which Torres's actor Roxann Dawson talked about how the characters rarely interacted. Marooned, published in the same year, focuses on Kes being kidnapped by a space pirate; the author Christie Golden said that she wanted to explore how Kes would appear to an alien with a lifespan of thousands of years.[64]

Kes is included in stories published after Voyager ended.[68] She goes back in time to help create an Ocampa and Nacene hybrid in Heather Jarman's 2006 novel Evolution, the third in the String Theory trilogy.[44][68][note 3] The book describes the Kes from "Fury" as the "manifestation of her dark side" made as byproduct of this time travel.[44] Jarman used Evolution to explore questions she had with Voyager, such as how Neelix felt about Kes after her departure and what the Ocampa home world looked like in the past.[68] In Kirsten Beyer's 2012 book, The Eternal Tide, Kes helps to resurrect a dead Janeway.[44]

Kes also appears in short stories,[69] like Penny A. Proctor's "Restoration" from the 2002 anthology Star Trek: Strange New Worlds V in which she revives Ocampa's ecosystem.[44][69] She is included in three stories from the 2005 collection Distant Shores. In Kim Sheard's "Winds of Change", Kes struggles with aggression after "Warlord" and asks Torres for advice. Sheard developed the concept after being told the anthology would focus on unusual character combinations. "Closure" is about Neelix seeing Kes after being caught in a cave-in with Seven of Nine. The author James Swallow was inspired by how Ethan Phillips, who plays Neelix, wanted closure for his character's relationship with Kes. In "Brief Candle", Neelix talks about one of his memories with Kes; the writer Christopher L. Bennett said she was one of his favorite Voyager characters.[69]

Analysis

Femininity

Academics have analyzed Kes based on her gender and representation of femininity. Communication studies professor Mia Consalvo described her as a "woman with stereotypically feminine traits" and an example of how Star Trek portrays these characteristics, namely "empathy and caring", as better suited for healthcare positions rather than leadership.[70] American culture historian Peter W.Y. Lee said Voyager characterizes Kes as a "little girl" and struggles to maintain her innocence as the series progressed,[71] specifically with scenes involving sex or motherhood.[72] Lee argued that she becomes too mature for this role after adopting a "more aggressive womanhood and sexuality" in "Warlord", which foreshadows her having "outgrown her home" and leaving Voyager.[73]

Other scholars examined Kes in the context of the 1990s—when Voyager was airing—and how women were being depicted in that decade.[74][75] Editor Leimar Garcia- Siino noted that although Kes is active with her hydroponics garden and her medical and psychic training, her character was still shaped by the postfeminism of the 1990s and its "reactionary anti-feminist and traditionally gendered views".[74] Authors K.M. Heath and A. S. Carlisle interpreted Voyager's female characters, including Kes, as mirroring similar struggles that American women faced in the 1990s.[75]

Mental abilities

Critics have offered many readings on Kes's mental abilities, like how they are shown as dangerous or unpredictable.[76][77] Media studies scholar Marion Gymnich wrote that in "Cold Fire", Kes changes from "generally very friendly and gentle" to "extremely destructive" after being tutored by another Ocampa. She cited her as an example of Star Trek negatively portraying telepathy.[76] Comparing Voyager to Homer's the Odyssey, literary scholar Kwasu David Tembo likened Kes to two of the poem's characters—Calypso and Circe—as her powers both endanger the ship and aid in its homeward journey. Tembo wrote that Kes and Circle both have the "attractive and equally dangerous aspects of Aeaea and Ocampan power are under the absolute control of a female authority".[77]

Other scholars focused on how Kes's powers contributed to her character development.[78][79] Aviva Dove Viebahn, a professor of media studies, argued that the non-human Kes is nearly an example of tokenism, but believed this is avoided as her abilities, which are shown to be stronger than Voyager's medical and scientific technologies, provide her with agency.[78] Lee wrote that Voyager focuses Kes's character arc on her mental abilities rather than her physical development; he explained that "Kes’s girl power rested in her brains, not her bared skin".[79]

Reception

Kes's age was a topic of critical commentary.[80] Bustle's Marie Southard Ospina praised "Elogium" for its portrayal of a woman voluntarily not having a baby, but felt that Kes's age made the moment uncomfortable.[81] Other commentators felt Kes was too young to be dating Neelix.[82][83] According to Den of Geek's Juliette Harrisson, the age gap was frequently criticized online.[84] Science fiction author Sylvia Spruck Wrigley interpreted Kes as undergoing puberty in "Elogium", noting that it raises questions about Neelix starting a relationship with a prepubescent girl.[83][note 4] Harrisson and The Philadelphia Inquirer's Jonathan Storm wrote that the age difference could be rationalized since Kes and Neelix are aliens with different biology than humans.[84][85]

Critics praised the decision to remove Kes during Voyager's fourth season,[86] finding her to be boring[87][88] and without a clear direction.[89] Rob Owen, writing for the Albany Times Union, felt she was "reduced to a subservient Nurse Chapel role" early in the series.[90] Henry Mietkiewicz of the Toronto Star thought she did not contribute much outside of her medical training.[91] In retrospective reviews, The A.V. Club's William Hughes called Kes the show's "most superfluous character",[92] and Tom Pritchard of Gizmodo dismissed her as "generally a pretty crap and useless character".[93]

Other reviewers responded more negatively to this casting change.[94] The Virginian-Pilot's Larry Bonko, for instance, was disappointed as he felt that Kes "gave the series heart".[95] Andy Patrizio of IGN preferred Lien as Kes over the new addition of Ryan as Seven of Nine.[96] Writers Duncan Barrett and Michele Barrett cited Lien's removal as an example of Star Trek having "a serious historical problem with the treatment of its female performers", explaining that a male lead was never taken off a Star Trek series.[97][note 5]

Kes's return in "Fury" was criticized as one of the worst moments in the Star Trek franchise.[44][98] Keith DeCandido, writing for Reactor, considered the story to be insulting to the character[44][99] and described the script and Lien's acting as lacking any "emotional content".[99] Michael Weyer of Comic Book Resources believed that Kes deserved a better ending and disliked how she came back as "twisted monster whose actions can come off as a spoiled brat".[98] Fans were also critical of how the episode portrayed Kes.[98][100] Den of Geek's John Andrews had a more positive response to "Fury", referring to it as a "sad yet compelling character study".[101]

Notes

  1. ^ According to Kes, Ocampa go through a fertile period between the ages of four and five.[50] She is one year old in "Elogium"[50] and turns two in "Twisted", two episodes later.[51] By "Darkling", which aired the following season, Kes is three years old.[52]
  2. ^ Star Trek novels are not considered canon, and information from them can be contradicted and superseded by the Star Trek shows and films.[65] David Alan Mack, a longtime writer of Star Trek books, said that the tie-ins were not considered canon and must be consistent with canonical materials.[66]
  3. ^ The Nacene are a species of aliens that include the Caretaker and Suspiria, who are shown in "Caretaker" and "Cold Fire", respectively.[54]
  4. ^ In "Elogium", Captain Kathryn Janeway compares Kes's fertile period to humans going through puberty.[50]
  5. ^ Prior to Lien being taken off Star Trek: Voyager, Grace Lee Whitney was removed from Star Trek: The Original Series, Gates McFadden from Star Trek: The Next Generation, and Terry Farrell from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.[97]

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Poe 1998, p. 155.
  2. ^ a b c Poe 1998, p. 208.
  3. ^ Robinson & Wright 2020, p. 10.
  4. ^ a b c Robinson & Wright 2020, p. 97.
  5. ^ a b Poe 1998, pp. 176–177.
  6. ^ a b Poe 1998, p. 199.
  7. ^ a b Poe 1998, p. 189.
  8. ^ Poe 1998, p. 191.
  9. ^ Poe 1998, p. 134.
  10. ^ Poe 1998, p. 206.
  11. ^ Gross & Altman 1995, p. 351.
  12. ^ a b Poe 1998, p. 273.
  13. ^ Gross & Altman 1996, p. 156.
  14. ^ Poe 1998, p. 232.
  15. ^ Poe 1998, pp. 295–296.
  16. ^ a b c Patel Jr. 2000.
  17. ^ a b c DeCandido 2020.
  18. ^ Poe 1998, p. 303.
  19. ^ Robinson & Wright 2020, p. 200.
  20. ^ a b Harrisson 2018.
  21. ^ Lee 2020, pp. 91–92.
  22. ^ a b c Ruditis 2003, p. 146.
  23. ^ Robinson & Wright 2020, pp. 98–99.
  24. ^ Gross & Altman 1996, pp. 159–160.
  25. ^ a b c d e Robinson & Wright 2020, p. 91.
  26. ^ Robinson & Wright 2020, pp. 97–98.
  27. ^ a b Ruditis 2003, pp. 158–159.
  28. ^ Gross & Altman 1996, p. 134.
  29. ^ Kutzera 1996, p. 80.
  30. ^ Robinson & Wright 2020, p. 57.
  31. ^ a b c Gross & Altman 1996, p. 157.
  32. ^ a b Robinson & Wright 2020, p. 99.
  33. ^ a b c Robinson & Wright 2020, p. 101.
  34. ^ a b The Center Seat: 55 Years of Star Trek 2022, 28:44—31:00: A segment focused on Lien's removal from Star Trek: Voyager.
  35. ^ Robinson & Wright 2020, p. 100.
  36. ^ Ruditis 2003, p. 191.
  37. ^ Deggans 1997, p. 5F; Owen 1997, p. 5; Ruditis 2003, p. 191
  38. ^ Robinson & Wright 2020, p. 16.
  39. ^ Belcher 1997, p. 6.
  40. ^ Mietkiewicz 1997a, p. B10.
  41. ^ Deggans 1997, p. 5F.
  42. ^ "Braving the Unknown: Season Four" 2004, 5:57—6:23: An interview about Lien's removal from Voyager in its fourth season.
  43. ^ Robinson & Wright 2020, pp. 94–95.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h DeCandido 2021b.
  45. ^ Lien 2010.
  46. ^ Okuda, Okuda & Mirek 2011.
  47. ^ a b "Caretaker" 1995.
  48. ^ "Parallax" 1995.
  49. ^ "Phage" 1995.
  50. ^ a b c d "Elogium" 1995.
  51. ^ "Twisted" 1995.
  52. ^ a b "Darkling" 1997.
  53. ^ "Parturition" 1995.
  54. ^ a b c "Cold Fire" 1995.
  55. ^ "Time and Again" 1995.
  56. ^ "Persistence of Vision" 1995.
  57. ^ "Warlord" 1996.
  58. ^ "Sacred Ground" 1996.
  59. ^ "Before and After" 1997.
  60. ^ "Scorpion, Part I" 1997.
  61. ^ "The Gift" 1997.
  62. ^ "Fury" 2000.
  63. ^ Ayers 2006, Information cited to the following chapter: "Overture: Star Trek Fiction: Then and Now".
  64. ^ a b c Ayers 2006, Information cited to the following chapter: "Section 7: Star Trek: Voyager: Numbered Novels".
  65. ^ Ward 2012.
  66. ^ Britt 2021.
  67. ^ Ayers 2006, Information cited to the following chapter: "Section 10: Novelizations".
  68. ^ a b c Ayers 2006, Information cited to the following chapter: "Section 8: Star Trek: Voyager: Unnumbered Novels".
  69. ^ a b c Ayers 2006, Information cited to the following chapter: "Section 13: Anthologies.
  70. ^ Consalvo 2004, p. 202.
  71. ^ Lee 2020, pp. 83–84.
  72. ^ Lee 2020, pp. 85–87.
  73. ^ Lee 2020, pp. 91–93.
  74. ^ a b Garcia-Siino 2022, p. 49.
  75. ^ a b Heath & Carlisle 2020, p. 66.
  76. ^ a b Gymnich 2005, pp. 68–70.
  77. ^ a b Tembo 2020, pp. 23–24.
  78. ^ a b Dove-Viebahn 2007, p. 606.
  79. ^ a b Lee 2020, pp. 90–91.
  80. ^ Harrisson 2023; Ospina 2014; Ulster 2020; Wrigley 2022, p. 422
  81. ^ Ospina 2014.
  82. ^ Ulster 2020.
  83. ^ a b Wrigley 2022, p. 422.
  84. ^ a b Harrisson 2023.
  85. ^ Storm 1995, p. E6.
  86. ^ Harrisson 2013; Heldenfels 1997, p. B8; Hughes 2015; Mietkiewicz 1997b, p. D2; Owen 1997, p. 5; Pennington 2001, p. F2; Pritchard 2017
  87. ^ Heldenfels 1997, p. B8.
  88. ^ Pennington 2001, p. F2.
  89. ^ Harrisson 2013; Hughes 2015; Mietkiewicz 1997b, p. D2; Pritchard 2017
  90. ^ Owen 1997, p. 5.
  91. ^ Mietkiewicz 1997b, p. D2.
  92. ^ Hughes 2015.
  93. ^ Pritchard 2017.
  94. ^ Barrett & Barrett 2016, p. 172; Bonko 1997; Patrizio 2004
  95. ^ Bonko 1997.
  96. ^ Patrizio 2004.
  97. ^ a b Barrett & Barrett 2016, p. 172.
  98. ^ a b c Weyer 2018.
  99. ^ a b DeCandido 2021a.
  100. ^ Lee 2020, pp. 93–94.
  101. ^ Andrews 2016.

Citations

External links