Available Formats
Decoding Star Wars: Gender, Race and the Power of Code in a Galaxy Far, Far Away
By (Author) Rebecca Harrison
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic USA
30th April 2026
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Performing arts genres: Science fiction, fantasy and horror
Gender studies, gender groups
Computer programming / software engineering
Hardback
256
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
Decoding Star Wars reveals the relationships between films, code, software and power both on and off screen in the Star Wars universe.
Since the production and release of The Phantom Menace (1999), the Star Wars franchise has increasingly relied on computer code to tell its stories and circulate its various media via CGI, digital exhibition, and online distribution. But who writes the code and develops the software that makes Star Wars possible as it expands from the twentieth into the 21st century How do programmers identities inform how they design and circulate the films And why does the history of code remain hidden in narratives about Star Wars filmmaking and viewing
Decoding Star Wars answers these questions to reveal how gender and race are central to the Star Wars universe, from the creation of its algorithms to the ways that characters are represented onscreen. In addition, it demonstrates how cinema is complicated by computers, digital technologies, and power, in ways that are so far unexplored in film history.
Rebecca Harrison is a UK-based Independent Scholar. She has published From Steam to Screen: Cinema, the Railways and Modernity (2018), and articles on cinema, technology, and their intersections with gender, race and class. She received the Routledge-IAMHIST Best Article by a Junior Scholar Award in 2016.