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Kid 25's
Library Exhibits
Alien Life
Guide to Alien Literature
Alien Life
Vera Historia
(by
Lucian, of Samosata
)
A Voyage to the Moon
(by
Cyrano De Bergerac
)
Micromegas
(by
Voltaire
)
Asgard and the gods : the tales and trad...
(by
Wägner, Wilhelm
)
The Pyramids of Giza
(by
Quibell, Annie Abernethie Pirie
)
The possibility of alien life fascinates humankind. The earliest recorded references to extraterrestrials occur mainly in religious terms. The earliest known record of alien life in literature can be found in the
Epic of Gilgamesh
, which dates from the Third Dynasty of Ur (circa 2100 B.C.). In these tales, the King of Uruk (Gilgamesh) and Enkidu (originally Gilgamesh’s adversary) defeat occult monsters on epic quests either in defiance or obedience to an assortment of gods and goddesses. In the 2nd century B.C., Assyrian satirist
Lucian of Samosata
wrote
True History
, a parody of Greek mythology that involved traveling to outer space, alien life forms, and interplanetary warfare.
The concept of alien life forms conflicted with the Christian doctrine of mankind made in God’s image. Insistence upon the existence of intelligent alien life could have dire consequences, as discovered in 1593 by
Giordano Bruno
, an Italian Dominican friar, philosopher, mathematician, and poet, when he was first tried for the heresy of
cosmic pluralism
. An admirer of Copernicus, Bruno’s fame exploded after his execution in 1600.
Nearly 2,000 years after Lucian, Johannes Kepler penned a scientific fantasy about a population of intelligent beings on the moon in his unpublished manuscript
Somnium
(1611). Cyrano de Bergerac wrote
Comical History of the States and Empires of the Moon
(1657),
Empires of the Sun
(1662), and
A Voyage to the Moon
(1899)--all of them published posthumously--and
Voltaire
wrote
Micromegas
(1752). Modern author
Arthur C. Clarke
credits de Bergerac with predicting rocket-powered space flight.
Various philosophers and writers throughout the centuries speculate whether the ancient gods, such as the
Nordic gods
in
Asgard
, can be considered aliens. Theories about regarding the existence advanced aliens interfering in less advanced, human concerns, such as aliens building the
Great Pyramids of Giza
and
Stonehenge
in England, thought to be far beyond the technologies and capacities of the peoples who built them.
Of course, the whole genre of science fiction and its focus on alien life forms didn’t really gain traction until iconic author
H. G. Wells
and
Edgar Rice Burroughs
burst upon the literary scene in the early 20th century. Other 20th century literary titans who fantasized about intelligent life beyond Planet Earth include:
In 1963, the United Kingdom dominated the exploration of extraterrestrial life in popular culture with television programs based on the character of
Dr. Who
. The series continues today.
A decade later in 1973, Arthur C. Clarke broke into fame with
Rendezvous with Rama
, in which alien life enters Earth’s solar system rather than human explorers venturing into outer space.
Douglas Adams
, a comedic English writer, satirized the entire genre of science fiction.
Radio broadcast
his most famous book,
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
, in 1978, and filmmakers produced a
movie
of the same title in 2005.
Terry Pratchett
, another comedic English writer, took an approach more closely aligned with fantasy with his Discworld series.
In 1961,
Robert A. Heinlein
released
Stranger in a Strange Land
, about a human born and matured on Mars who travels to Earth.
In the 1980s,
Orson Scott Card
showcased the deadly consequences of potential conflict between aliens and humankind when both want to dominate the universe in
Ender’s Game
.
Breaking into an overtly masculine genre,
Octavia E. Butler
wrote of humanity’s salvation at the hands of aliens in her 3-volume collection titled
Lilith’s Brood
.
The
Hainish Cycle
, a series of award-winning novels by literary icon
Ursula K. Le Guin
, deals with the consequences of alien descendants of humans who founded colonies on other planets contacting each other for the first time or establishing diplomatic relations.
Madeleine L’Engle
continued the strong feminine presence in the literary exploration of other planets, other dimensions, and other intelligent life with her breakthrough children’s book
A Wrinkle in Time
(1962).
The Martian Chronicles
(1950) by
Ray Bradbury
explores the human occupation of Mars.
Of course, no list focusing on alien life forms can be complete without television’s iconic exploration of social issues in
Gene Roddenberry
’s
Star Trek
and its many spin-off series.
By Karen M. Smith
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