Pregnancy in SF: Difference between revisions

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** episode "[[Terms of Endearment (X-Files episode)|Terms of Endearment]]" (demonic pregnancy with a twist)
** episode "[[Terms of Endearment (X-Files episode)|Terms of Endearment]]" (demonic pregnancy with a twist)
** ''[[X-Files]]'': repeated themes with [[Scully]] and other women of alien pregnancy
** ''[[X-Files]]'': repeated themes with [[Scully]] and other women of alien pregnancy
** ''[[Point Pleasant]]'' - [[Christina Nickson]]'s mother was forcibly impregnated by Satan; it is alluded to in several episodes, and she describes it one of the later episodes of the series.  
* ''[[Point Pleasant]]'' - [[Christina Nickson]]'s mother was forcibly impregnated by Satan; it is alluded to in several episodes, and she describes it one of the later episodes of the series.  
* [[Naomi Mitchison]]'s ''[[Memoirs of a Spacewoman]]''
* [[Naomi Mitchison]]'s ''[[Memoirs of a Spacewoman]]''
* [[John Wyndham]]'s ''[[The Midwich Cuckoos]]'' (film versions: ''[[Village of the Damned]]'')
* [[John Wyndham]]'s ''[[The Midwich Cuckoos]]'' (film versions: ''[[Village of the Damned]]'')

Revision as of 06:24, 22 April 2008

SF featuring pregnancy.

Failed contraceptives, pregnancy and abortion issues

  • Pamela Dean - Tam Lin (1991), contraceptive failure, mention of abortion issues, and pregnancy as a plot point.
  • Vonda N. McIntyre - Dreamsnake (1978), one section covers contraception by biofeedback and how one young man who is unable to learn the technique is ostracized

Forced pregnancy

  • D.F. Jones - Implosion (1967), worldwide plague of infertility leads the men in government in England to establish forced breeding camps.

Pregnancy as metaphor

Metaphor as pregnancy

  • Ursula K. Le Guin - "Intracom," in which a pregnant woman's interior conversations are converted into the interactions of a spaceship crew

Alternative pregnancy

Demonic and alien pregnancy

Pregnancy anxieties

Superfast pregnancy

Other suggestions

  • Suzy McKee Charnas - Motherlines, in which members of an all-female society can impregnate themselves by "mating" with their horses (the methodology is never fully explained)
  • Hiromi Goto - The Kappa Child (2001)
  • Elizabeth A. Lynn - "The Man Who Was Pregnant"
  • Geoff Ryman - Air, one of the weirdest damn pregnancies & deliveries.
  • Will Shetterly and Emma Bull, eds. The Liavek shared-world series, in which the length of a woman's labor determines the amount of magical power the child has.
  • John Wyndham - The Midwich Cuckoos (1957) and reprinted as The Village of the Damned (1961)

See also

External links