Non-consensual aphrodisiacs in SF: Difference between revisions

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* ''[[Alienated]]'': Cameron's pheromones and [[Isabelle's pimple]].
* ''[[Alienated]]'': Cameron's pheromones and [[Isabelle's pimple]].
* ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV series)|Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'': chocolate bars in "[[Band Candy]]" revert [[Rupert Giles|Giles]] and [[Joyce Summers]] to their teen selves and they have sex (the candy makes people act irresponsibly and is not strictly an aphrodisiac).
* ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV series)|Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'': chocolate bars in "[[Band Candy]]" revert [[Rupert Giles|Giles]] and [[Joyce Summers]] to their teen selves and they have sex (the candy makes people act irresponsibly and is not strictly an aphrodisiac).
* Buffy season 2 "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered" S2 - Xander does a love spell to try to get Cordelia back; these things never work out.
* [[Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV series)|Buffy]] S4 episode - "Beer Bad"  
* [[Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV series)|Buffy]] S4 episode - "Beer Bad"  
* [[Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV series)|Buffy]] S4 episode - "Where the Wild Things Are" ...  
* [[Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV series)|Buffy]] S4 episode - "Where the Wild Things Are" ...  
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* ''[[Torchwood (TV series)]]'': Owen Harper's perfume in "[[Everything Changes (Torchwood episode)|Everything Changes]]".
* ''[[Torchwood (TV series)]]'': Owen Harper's perfume in "[[Everything Changes (Torchwood episode)|Everything Changes]]".
* "[[The X-Files]]", first season episode "[[GenderBender]]" - While pursuing a series of mysterious deaths, Scully is nearly overwhelmed by deadly pheromones from a member of a religious group; 6th season episode "Three of a Kind", Scully is given an intoxicant which makes her very flirtatious.
* "[[The X-Files]]", first season episode "[[GenderBender]]" - While pursuing a series of mysterious deaths, Scully is nearly overwhelmed by deadly pheromones from a member of a religious group; 6th season episode "Three of a Kind", Scully is given an intoxicant which makes her very flirtatious.
* "[[A Comedy of Eros]]" episode of [[Xena: Warrior Princess]], when Cupid's arrows strike many people randomly; "[[For Him the Bell Tolls]]" (Aphrodite makes Joxer an irresistible magnet for affection)
* While not SF, "Veronica Mars" explores this topic repeatedly.
* While not SF, "Veronica Mars" explores this topic repeatedly.


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* "[[Aliens made them do it]]"
* "[[Aliens made them do it]]"
* [[Rape]]
* [[Rape]]
{{stub}}


==References==
==References==
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[[Category: Sexuality themes]]
[[Category:Sexuality themes]]
[[Category:Technology themes]]
[[Category:Technology themes]]
[[Category: Violence themes]]
[[Category: Violence themes]]
[[category:Themes and tropes by name]]

Latest revision as of 10:29, 8 June 2010

Non-consensual aphrodisiacs are a staple of SF, often paired with the "aliens made them do it" cliché.

They are a method of contriving sexual activity between characters who would not otherwise be having sex together, and therefore a rape-enabling plot device. However, science-fiction stories that address the rapes committed by means of non-consensual aphrodisiacs are rare, and this plot device is most often used for the reader's titillation, usually within a very sexist framework.

They are different from consensual aphrodisiacs in that they do not merely enhance sexual desire or performance, but interfere with a character's ability to give consent to sex, and/or by provoking uncontrollable sexual behaviour.

They are the SFnal equivalent of what are called "date-rape" drugs, or roofies, in modern mundane parlance, and have a variety of names.

A common example is having a character who exudes overpowering pheromones,[1] affecting all those around them, although this effect is often sex-linked, and/or limited by sexual orientation. These "natural" sources of non-consensual aphrodisiacs also exist in synthetised or technological forms: sprays, beverages, pills, etc...

Telepathic and other forms of mind control also overlap with this category.

Pornography makes a lot of use of this plot device, and some real-life advertising campaigns (ex: the Lynx/Axe body spray) depict the effects of their products as such.

Examples

On Television

In Literature

Related Topics

References

  1. See, e.g., "Alienated"; X-Files episode, "GenderBender".