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Encyclopedia > Aliens in fiction

The existence of alien beings (intelligent extraterrestrial life) has been one of the enduring themes of science fiction.


One of the first fiction writers to use Alien beings from another planet was H. G. Wells. The War of the Worlds is the best known of his works; it also introduced the modern reader to the recurring concept of interplanetary invasion by malign aliens.


The alien invasion was one of two themes which was to crop up again and again in the 'pulp science fiction' years, the 1930s to 1960s. The Cold War made people particularly receptive to the idea of evil and incomprehensible beings coming to destroy or enslave earthly (usually American) life. Examples of these include the short story "The Liberation of Earth" by William Tenn.


The contrasting picture of aliens during this time was that of the wise and civlised race coming to Earth to impart their wisdom and solve our problems. These stories were almost as popular as the invasion theme, at a time when mankind looked as though it was in the brink of destroying itself. A good example of this story is the movie The Day the Earth Stood Still.


Aliens are also used in fiction to examine the human race from a different perspective; the author wishes us to examine ourselves in a new way by contrasting us with an imagined alternative. This was one of the functions of Mr. Spock in Star Trek.


One of the most frequently portrayed alien races from our own solar system are the Martians, Mars being the most romanticized of the other planets whose surface conditions are closest to being amenable to life. See Mars in fiction for more details on the red planet's numerous roles.


Popular fictional tales of the first half of the 20th century also includes many fanciful tales of alien races and civilizations on our nearest neighbor, the Moon.


Many of the aliens have been hostile and alien invasion has been a very popular idea in English-language science fiction.


Writers have created a long list of extraterrestrial creatures and intelligent beings; see the list of aliens in fiction.


Related topics



  Results from FactBites:
 
Fiction Arts (1925 words)
The use of the familiar made alien only to be revealed as Other, is perhaps an even more powerful way of ‘throwing the alien into relief.’ The familiar is thrown into relief, estranged, shown to be illusory and questionable.
The alien, then is the self made other, and reality rendered un-real, it becomes pervasive and inescapable inextricably linked to the previously familiar.
The fact that the novum is not the aliens, but a new form of something familiar (identity) plays a key role in the process of throwing the alien into relief.
Extraterrestrial life in popular culture - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (767 words)
This usage is clearly anthropocentric: when humans in fictional accounts accomplish interstellar travel and land on a planet elsewhere in the universe, the local inhabitants of these other planets are usually still referred to as "alien," even though they are the native life form and the humans are the intruders.
It is easier to relate to an alien with features we recognize such as arms and legs, two eyes, a nose and a mouth, as well as behavior we recognize such as baring its teeth in anger or widening its eyes in shock or surprise.
Aliens are also used in fiction to examine the human race from a different perspective; the author wishes us to examine ourselves in a new way by contrasting us with an imagined alternative.
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