-Lister and Rimmer, The End
Human spirit- The show addresses frequently what elements  comprise the human soul and what it truly means to be "human". In a number of  episodes, the crew are confronted with situations that test their moral fiber  and ability to show the more altruistic side of the human spirit. Additionally,  the crew are sometimes put in very strange scenarios that illustrate the  writer's perspectives on the mental and emotional differences between humans  and machines.
 
Possibly the best  facilitator of conversation on this topic is Kryten, the mechanoid who lacks  human emotions. In one extremely  poignant episode, "DNA", Kryten is transformed from an android into a human,  complete with real human emotions (see photo at left). However, during the course of the episode,  Kryten is shown to be distressed over the fact that his eyes no longer have a  zoom function, his nipple nuts no longer pick up radio wave signals, and that  he still gets erotic thoughts about vacuum cleaners. Furthermore, Kryten  informs his three spare heads (after all, he is an android) that they will no longer be of use since he is no  longer a mechanical. The four eventually get into a fight, ending with Kryten  insulting his own heads and the heads telling him that Kryten has turned on his  own kind. Kryten is eventually turned back into a mechanical at the end of the  episode at the insistence of Lister, who mistakenly attributes Popeye's saying of "I am  what I am" to Descartes.
  Kryten  shows us in this episode that the  hypothetical transition from mechanical to human would be taxing on the mind.  Mechanicals are programmed to think one way. Even though Kryten had broken his  programming and arrived at an independent set of morals, he was still a  mechanical and not human. Becoming human technically made him an equal to that  of Lister and Rimmer, meaning that he no longer felt compelled to do the chores  onboard the ship. Kryten is exposed to true emotions and has difficulty coping with the awkward transition  from mechanoid to human (as evidenced by the vacuum cleaner incident above).

  Another  good example of the human spirit theme is in the episode "Inquisitor". In the  episode, a renegade GELF (see picture) takes the Red  Dwarf crew prisoner and evaluates their worthiness. If they fail to have  lived a worthwhile life, they are erased from existence and are replaced by  someone more worthy. Kryten comes up with a plan to kill the Inquisitor and is  prepared to carry it out, but Lister tells him no because Kryten is programmed  not to kill.
  Lister  shows a staunch desire to adhere to basic robotic dogma in this instance.  Drawing from Asimov's laws, Lister refuses to allow Kryten to kill the  Inquisitor. This shows us that the Dwarfers are not in agreement over the  correct action for a robot to take in this instance.
Time- Destiny and time are featured heavily in Red Dwarf. The two ideas are commonly entertwined, mostly through the concept of time travel and causality, or the idea that an action in the past will affect an event in the future.
  As  alluded to earlier, one of the most profound examples of the themes of time and  destiny is the fact that Lister is his own father. In the episode "Ouroboros",  Lister fills an in-vitro tube with his sperm and gives it to an alternate  version of his lover, Kochanski, so that she and her hologramtic version of  Lister can conceive a child. Through a series of events, Kochanski ends up  having her child in Lister's universe, and Lister uses a time drive to go back  in time and leave the baby version of himself under the pool table in the  Aigburth Arms pub where he was found. In this now infinite cycle of continual  rebirth, Lister claims, the human race can never truly be extinct.
  A key  theme used by the writers of Red Dwarf was destiny. We saw in this example that Lister will perpetually be his own  father and keep the cycle of life going. Because Lister traveled back in time  and performed his own birth once, he is destined to do the same action time and  time again due to causality.
  In the  first series, the episode "Future Echoes" creates an interesting perspective on  time and destiny. In the episode, the Red  Dwarf breaks the light barrier and starts to see visions of events that  have yet to happen. Some of these events include The Cat chipping his tooth and  Rimmer seeing someone who believes to be Lister die a horrible death in the  drive room. Lister is determined to stop both of these events from happening ,  but ends up being the cause of the fromer when he tackles the Cat in an attempt  to prevent him from eating one of Lister's robotic fish. Lister is then  summoned by Holly to the drive room to stop an emergency, and is prepared to  face death. However, he repairs the drive plate without incident. When he  returns to his room, he finds a version of himself from the future, who tells  his younger self that the person that Rimmer saw die was actually his son,  Bexley. This leaves Lister confused as to how he was going to have a child  without a woman onboard.
  Lister  tries extremely hard in this episode to fight against destiny, but to no avail;  He cannot stop what is going to happen. Even though he tries to avoid death, he  is only able to escape due to being misinformed by Rimmer.
Masculinity- The theme of the role of males in deep space is not directly referred to in Red Dwarf. However, scholars (in particular, Dr. Elyce Rae Helford) have said that the show Red Dwarf should exist outside of a "patricarchal" society, yet the show shows that the Dwarfers are no less concerned about macho attitudes now that they are in deep space than they would have been on Earth.
It is clearly evident that the show centers around the male psyche; an almost exclusively male cast assisted by one dim-witted female computer. The only positive female character appears in the middle of the show's second to last series. In Dr. Helford's paper, Reading Masculinities in "Post-Patriarchal Space" of Red Dwarf, the author says that "[Red Dwarf] offer[s] depictions of masculinity generally unencumbered by actual tensions between the sexes, inviting viewers to examine gender relations primarily as envisioned by the male/masculine characters in fantasies, dreams, and memories. (Helford, 20)". Helford claims that the males in the show, despite no longer having to conform to displays of masochistic behavior, continue to compete for dominance. Lister and Rimmer often insult each other by making fun of teh other's sexuality. This kind of blatant homosexual bashing creates a feeling of male competition between people who no longer need to be competing for a mate.
Last update: 11/23/2009
This site was created by Stephen Shapiro for HONR101, Speculative Visions, an honors course at DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana, instructed by Dr. Arthur Evans. If you have any questions or comments about the website, please contact: stephenshapiro_2013@depauw.edu