Alien Impregnation Fiction

Alien Impregnation Fiction




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Foreign Mollusca: An Alien Impregnation Story Kindle Edition
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John is down on his luck when he is nearly taken out by a rock hurtling from the sky. The rock smashes into the road just in front of his car. Having seen how much space rocks sell for, he is not willing to let this opportunity slip through his fingers. Unfortunately, what he doesn’t know is that the rock is carrying a passenger, a passenger that will change more than just his life.
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This is my first biography so bare with me
I'm an author, who started off doing digital morphs then found a keen interest in fictional writing. I started off writing down dreams and memories, then turning these into stories. I then worked with clients doing commission work, but lack of payment from a couple saw me seeking other venues. So here I find myself publishing my books digitally.
I tend to write stories about transformation processes, TG and Mpreg, always striving to make sure terminology and science are as convincing as I can. With each story I aim to improve my style and quality of writing.
There are a few phrases that I live by:
To err is human, to really F*$k things up requires a computer.
Heaven doesn't want me, and Hell is afraid of me.
Semper in excrementum, Solum profundum variat. (Always in the sh1t, only the depth varies)
That's pretty much all there is to say really.
Thanks for taking the time to read this.

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One thing I like about Anita Sarkeesian’s series, Tropes vs. Women, is that she doesn’t go for the obvious. Instead, she draws our attention to insidious and ubiquitous tropes that many of us have, nonetheless, never quite noticed before, exactly because they’ve simply become the water we swim in (e.g., the Manic Pixie Dreamgirl ).
In this episode she reveals the Mystical Pregnancy trope , common in science fiction, in which women are involuntarily impregnated by aliens and monsters for nefarious and frightening purposes. Following Laura Shapiro , she calls out writers and directors for using pregnancy as a form of “torture porn” and using women’s biological capacity as a plot device, meanwhile ignoring the real, non-fiction threats to women’s reproductive rights.
She omits two interesting examples that immediately leap to my mind: 1) Alien Resurrection and 2) almost anything by David Cronenberg.
In the Alien film, Ripley is never actually pregnant -- it's the Alien queen who gives birth to a human-alien hybrid "baby." But at the end of the film the hybrid indicates that is sees Ripley as "mama," and Ripley in turn seems to acknowledge it as "child" (she strokes it and speaks softly to it) -- but then she uses her own acidic blood to make a small hole in the spacecraft, through which the hybrid is slowly sucked out. The suction scene, in particular, always struck me as a metaphor for abortion, though I haven't seen much written about it as that.
Cronenberg is perhaps a category of his own -- he seems to be weirdly fascinated with reproduction, gynecology, etc. There's Dead Ringers (with Jeremy Irons playing identical twin gynecologists, one of whom, IIRC, specializes in treating women with deformed wombs), but there's also The Fly (in which Geena Davis' character dreams she gives birth to a giant maggot) and eXistenz (in which Jennifer Jason Leigh carries around a virtual reality pod that attaches to her with an "umbycord" -- do a Google image search on the film, and you'll see what I mean).
I've never come up with anything coherent out of all this, but there's certainly plenty of fodder there for those who want to try.
Actually in the X-Files, Scully is not impregnated by aliens (the film sequence shown is from when she is abducted and treated like a guinea pig by aliens but that's what the aliens do to anyone abducted in the series male or female). She undergoes in vitro treatments with Mulder as the sperm donor and also the series suggests they have a physical relationship, either way that's how she becomes pregnant, fertility treatment or sex the standards now of reality.
[...] Sociological Images Rod of AlexandriaPreacher of Hope | Black Scholar of Patristics | Writer for Nonviolent Politics. [...]
I think the whole point of some of these "pregnancy plots" is to (roughly paraphrasing) take something that is natural and distort it into torture porn. That's what makes them horrific - it's taking something we associate positive feelings with and turning it on us.
I think this directly speaks to the lack of control women have over their own bodies. Neither in the science fiction episodes presented nor in an increasing number of states are women allowed to make decisions about what is best for them without interference - whether from the government or aliens. I'm not sure about in film, but in reality women are portrayed as unintelligent and incapable of making tough life changing decisions without the help of (mostly white, mostly wealthy, mostly male) legislators creating laws that require a woman to listen to some bizarre statement, go through a waiting period, or watch an ultrasound - all against her will. It's as if these politicians believe that women are inferior and thus, must be forced to "understand" what's going on with an abortion or pregnancy. I personally find it foul and loathsome and something that keeps women's second class status as citizens tied to their ability to reproduce . The links from science fiction to the current attack on women's rights is a great way to bring these themes together.
I came in here to say basically the same thing. Distorting a natural process is certainly the obvious subtext of these plotlines and clearly is what many of the writers were thinking of when they created these storylines.
Sarkeesian's mystical pregnancy theory is kind of a sub-subcontext that is probably mostly unexplored by writers and most viewers. It is present and definitely important, however. And we can see additional sexism inherent in the potential assumption that pregnancy and birth is the ultimate goal or happiness for women, therefore these forcible impregnations and horrific offspring would represent the ultimate sort of torture. Though perhaps in some more completely realized characters like Starbuck, loss of bodily autonomy might also be a significant horror.
For what it's worth, Battlestar Galactica does have a couple of interesting episodes that deal with abortion and abortion rights.
She also omits many media artifacts that don't originate in Western culture, for example the prolific sub-genre of hentai (anime) porn featuring alien impregnation, usually by means of monstrous tentacles.
While this video is interesting and brings to light a common trope, it does fail to mention SciFi's love of the male pregnancy. Even Arnold Schwarzenegger became pregnant. And, since she singled out Star Trek: The Next Generation and Counselor Troi, I will point out that the Star Trek franchise also has a male pregnancy under its belt. The Star Trek: Enterprise episode "Unexpected" deals explicitly with the pregnancy of Trip Tucker, and his feelings about being pregnant. I'm not sure if it's ever mentioned again in the series, but I don't remember it. 
I found this entire piece interesting, though. I'm currently studying fanfiction of science fiction shows, and I've stumbled upon the genre of Mpreg (male-pregnancy). Even though it is only occasionally mentioned in the actual shows, it is quite common in works written by fans of the shows. But then, fans do seem to like creating their own tropes.
While the pregnancy plotline itself is problematic, I think that the most telling part of it is that none of the victims ever choose to terminate the pregnancy. That is, not only is it a harrowing experience, the implicit message is that there is no choice but the go through with it, wether it's a demonic fetus, a fetus that may kill the mother or even far far from being human. Heck, when the pregnancy does get terminated, as in torchwood, it's a man's choice, anot the choice of the woman herself.
Actually, the Immaculate Conception (of Mary) is not the same as the virgin birth (of Jesus.) Just a little quibble on a great discussion.
I'd like to point out that the episode from the second season of Battlestar Galactica that is referenced in this video, "The Farm", is something of a subversion of this trope. It is used as a metaphor for religious anti-abortionists wanting forced pregnancy to be the norm -- part of an ongoing deconstruction of abortion politics that takes place throughout the series. In the same episode, the Cylons' attempts at forced impregnation are contrasted with the voluntary and consenual conception between a Cylon and a human.
I'm trying to think of what the male equivalent of this would be, and I keep thinking of the NeuWho episode "The Doctor's Daughter", where the Doctor is presented with a sort of random grown up clonegirl with some of his DNA that disappears into the ether after a single episode.
Not that it's really comparable, since this is more about the pregnancy itself than the whole motherhood part. But I do think men get random throwaway one-episode or one short character arc fatherhood experiences too.
On another note: I personally REALLY REALLY liked the way pregnancy/motherhood was handled on BSG in relation to Starbuck and Eight/Sharon/Boomer; I thought the relationship between Sharon vs. Boomer and how they dealt with Hera was really inter
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