So, there’s a planet, and on the planet there’s a human settlement, or area of settlement, which humans don’t go far from, and there are also intelligent aliens. The humans and the aliens have been in contact for a while, but the humans don’t really understand the aliens. Then our protagonist is captured by the aliens, or goes to a part of the planet where humans don’t go, and discovers the fascinating truth about the aliens. This usually but not always leads to better a human/alien relationship thereafter.
How many books fit that template?
In my post on Octavia Butler’s Survivor, I suggested three other examples: Marion Zimmer Bradley’s Star of Danger (and I could have added Darkover Landfall), C.J. Cherryh’s Forty Thousand in Gehenna, and Judith Moffett’s Pennterra. In comments people mentioned Orson Scott Card’s Speaker for the Dead, Mary Doria Russell’s The Sparrow, Jonathan Lethem’s Girl in Landscape, Amy Thomson’s The Color of Distance, Ursula Le Guin’s Rocannon’s World, Planet of Exile and The Left Hand of Darkness (though that doesn’t have a human settlement) and I further thought of Mary Gentle’s Golden Witchbreed and Nicola Griffith’s Ammonite. Please suggest more in comments if you have some!
In that lot we have some variation on a theme. Some of the “aliens” are practically human and some of them are really really alien. Sometimes things turn out well, sometimes terribly. Sometimes the protagonist goes native, sometimes the aliens get destroyed. But with all those variations, we also definitely have a theme.
I have read all of these except the Lethem, which strongly suggests that I like this story—and I do. When I stop consider what it is I like about it there’s a very simple answer: the aliens.
In my post, I suggested that the way a lot of these stories are written by women writers, and have female protagonists captured by aliens, might have something to do with the suggestion in Tiptree’s “The Women Men Don’t See” that for women, living with aliens might be better than living with men, a kind of extreme separatism. With the expanded list, we find that as protagonists we have several examples of adult men, though we still have a majority of women and a good sprinkling of boys. The relative power balance between humans and aliens is one of the things that varies a lot, and that variation is especially linked with protagonist gender. (If somebody would like to do a proper academic study of this, they could graph that!)
But in the comments OverTheSeaToSkye suggested:
It might be interesting to compare this SF trope to women’s captivity narratives of early American colonization—in the collection I have, some women never came to any sort of accommodation with Native Americans, but other cases are more ambiguous.
and Alex Cohen expanded on that:
The overall theme you’re talking about seems a bright mirror to darker Westerns like The Searchers. Capture by the natives—always of the girl—is one of the recurring motifs in the Western genre, but resolves quite differently. Perhaps the SF stories express our wish that things had turned out differently on the frontier.
Now isn’t that an interesting thought!
It’s especially interesting because there is something colonial going on—almost all of these stories have the little human colony sheltering on the alien prairie. There’s a way in which many stories of colonising other planets are based on the Western idea of the covered wagon translated to space, and here we have the acknowledgement that those prairies were not in fact vacant when the pioneers got there.
Viewed in that light Russell’s protagonist is the closest to the traditional “captured by Indians” stories. (I think they are more usefully “Indians” in this context, because they have a lot to say about white attitudes to Native Americans at the time but not all that much about the Native Americans themselves as real people and cultures.) Russell’s protagonist has a truly horrible time among alien savages. (I should mention that don’t like The Sparrow. I find it emotional manipulative and dishonest.) But leaving that aside, if you look at the rest of those I think we’ve got a very interesting spectrum of wishes for difference indeed—from complete human assimilation to the alien (Survivor, Planet of Exile, Ammonite) to destruction of the aliens and their whole environment (Golden Witchbreed) to hybrid symbioses of human and alien whether sexual (Pennterra, Darkover) or purely cultural (Forty Thousand in Gehenna).
Which brings me back to the aliens. What makes these books interesting, the thing you’d mention when talking about them, is almost always the alien cultures. The protagonist is often there to be an unimmersed viewpoint for the reader in the alien culture, so the human protagonist and the reader can learn about it at a reasonable speed. However little sense it would make in reality for the protagonist to solve the riddle of the aliens and reconcile them to the colony, it always makes sense in that context. What is interesting is that riddle, when it is solved the story is over. Heinlein, who was never terribly interested in aliens, does a story like this practically as an aside in Starman Jones. In most of the books listed above, the aliens are really interesting (at least to me)—and even when they’re almost human (The Left Hand of Darkness, Ammonite) they’re still the most interesting thing and what the book is about.
There’s a thing that science fiction does where it’s essentially retelling a conventional narrative but because it has so many more interesting options for the way the world can be, the story becomes wider and has more angles than it otherwise would. I think this is a case of that. It may well be that some of these writers were consciously (and others unconsciously) wishing for different outcomes on the historical frontier. But in approaching that, the process of transformation has given us something different and other and even more interesting.
Elizabeth Moon’s Remnant Population?
Oh, the dilemma. Name the book I am thinking of and possibly lead to interesting discussion, but spoil book three of a series . . .
Ah, I will cheat. Here’s a link proposing a panel at WisCon about said unnamed-here series and the issues raised in your post. Just sketching them, but.
Well, this might be a bit of a stretch, but what I thought of was Jefri and Amdi in A Fire Upon the Deep.
The whole book was great, of course, but the bits with Jefri and Amdi (and the exploration of Tine culture in general) were unquestionably the most fascinating parts for me.
Very cool post. I’ve been saying for a while now that the movie Alien has a lot more in common with an Western-genre Indian abduction story (capture by the “alien” for reproductive purposes) rather than a gothic horror novel. It hits many of the same touch points: a small group being in the middle of nowhere and hunted, with the threat of not just death, but with the loss of control of their reproductive faculties.
The Indian captivity stories seem to be a forerunner of the SciFi Horror movies of the 50s: They’ve come for our women.
Really, can we acknowledge how the Western-genre has influenced Science Fiction now without it leaving a bad taste in our mouths?
LeighDB: I wouldn’t count that, because it really is a first contact. There hasn’t been any human contact with the aliens that hasn’t understood them prior to that. I agree that it’s a terrific bit of a terrific book. I love aFutD generally.
Jo, what about books from the reverse point of view? Where the human is the captured “alien”? I’m thinking specifically of Cherryh’s Chanur books, here . . .
That possibility–which I don’t think exists, or is anyway very rare, in early Westerns–adds something to the SF concept, I suspect.
bluejo:
Ah, true. I knew there was something off about the notion.
No other sf suggestions at the moment, but you know, a really great example of this story in *Westerns* (with an adult male captive, no less) is Dances With Wolves.
Mary Frances: Yes, Pride of Chanur is precisely this with the POVs reversed, except that it’s also all in space. And the Atevi books have a nod in this direction too, or most especially Foreigner does.
I think you have to count Ken MacLeod‘s Learning The World as straddling the boundary of this category. It’s got the human colonists, but they’re still on the ship. It also doesn’t really have the single protagonist who goes to live among the aliens and figures them out trope, but it does have a contact story.
Interesting… I’ve been coming across a fair amount of what I’m calling “Clarkian” SF lately, which is the exact opposite of this stuff: Characters encounter alien cultures… and are completely unable to learn squat from them.
I call them Clarkian from books such as Rendezvous with Rama, where there’s this big unknown alien thing… and we can’t talk. Jack McDevitt’s excellent Academy (Hutch) books have a lot of the same (I’ve only made my way through three, so perhaps it gets better) — they keep coming across feral or extinct remnants of old cultures, and they get wiped out by one thing or another, and no hope of communication. The only thriving (and somewhat primitive) alien culture is kept isolated through a “prime directive”-like quarantine.
Is this the male version of the story: Women are aliens that we can try to date, maybe even live among, but will never understand?
frell — that should be “Clarkeian”
There’s a book whose title I can’t recall now that fits this trope very nicely, and my Google-fu has proved insufficient to the task of finding the title. So I’m going to describe it below, spoilers and all, and hope that somebody can remind me of the title/author.
There is a small human colony on a planet covered with enormous crystals that make travel extremely dangerous, since the crystals tend to explode unless you soothe them by playing quasi-musical tones as you pass. Our protags get trapped in the back-country, are eventually rescued by a band of flying aliens of a species not previously believed to be sentient. With the help of the flyers they discover that the crystals are actually sentient beings, then use this knowledge to subvert political intrigues back in the colony and derail a plan to clear all of the crystals from the surface of the planet.
It’s almost a subversion, because the crystal intelligences are quite a bit smarter than the humans and previously just hadn’t bothered paying attention to the motile, biological life. But turning the aliens into friendly allies is a fairly common twist on this trope.
Check out Burdens of Empire by C.J. Ryan for yet another twist on this same theme, except in this case there is an interesting little twist in the aliens :)
jaspax@12
Sounds like “After Long Silence” by Sheri Tepper.
Card’s Speaker for the Dead fits this perfectly.
Dick’s Martian Time Slip also does, in some ways, though I also think it subverts it at the same time.
For a sufficiently loose definition of alien, Bujold’s Sharing Knife series would qualify. The themes of intercultural interaction and understanding are similar, at least. Biologically there’s not nearly as much difference as humans and aliens, but then, that’s true of the frontier/”Indian” examples, too.
I wonder if any of the Lakewalker customs were deliberately modeled on Native Americans? Nomadism seems an obvious one, as well as the absence of (individual) land ownership. If so, the series could be seen as an attempt to rewrite the Matter of America the way it might have gone, rather than the way it did go; and viewed from this lens, various characters’ fears of intercultural conflicts seem much more horrifyingly realistic.
It fits the escape-from-the-patriarchy pattern, too (if that’s not too drastic an oversimplification).
However, it differs from the pattern you describe in at least one major way: when the “riddle” of why the “aliens” act the way they do is solved, the story is definitely *not* over – the overall arc of the series describes the changes to both cultures that result, ultimately, from one act of reckless heroism (Qnt’f qrpvfvba gb nggnpx vzzrqvngryl engure guna jnvg sbe ervasbeprzragf) that brings the two cultures into closer, um, contact.
City of Pearl by Karen Traviss also fits. I can’t honestly recommend it; it’s well written, but it’s one of those stories in which all the important characters–including the ones the author thought were sympathetic–are as far as I’m concerned villains.
Stanislaw Lem’s Solaris and Fiasco are excellent examples of the “Clarkeian” subgenre identified by joelfinkle @@@@@ #10.
Cherryh’s Cuckoo’s Egg, in which the human is raised from a baby by the aliens to learn their culture, strikes me as a variation on the theme. Really, a large proportion of Cherryh’s novels play with this central concept in one way or another.
As to Lem, His Master’s Voice is another that fits the theme of complete failure to comprehend the alien. But then Lem often seems dubious that we can comprehend anything whatsoever, including other people. The Investigation, MS Found in a Bathtub…
“Perhaps the SF stories express our wish that things had turned out differently on the frontier.”
Certainly, yes. It is hard to overstate how stunned European explorers were at the cultures they contacted, especially in the New World, and how quickly they turned to conquest and genocide. From my viewpoint, I would have to say that most of the aliens encountered in sf are, finally, less alien than the humans encountered on earth. Western Europe was a deeply conservative backwater in the early period of its expansion and conquests, and these people were easily shocked by strange customs. Most quickly turned to war and hatred.
What I think is less obvious is that the contacts are not over. I only know the new world, but there I can say that the centuries-old conflict is still begging resolution. Perhaps there is also a desire to navigate; to propose new directions. The time has come when the West is dependent on the rest of the world, and it is time to resolve our conflicts with other humans.
How about Janet Kagan’s Hellspark?
I like this story too – looking forward to reading some I hadn’t yet listed here!
Also, Nalo Hopkinson’s Midnight Robber.
I think Marjorie Bradley Kellogg & William B. Rossow’s Lear’s Daughters fits that template. And Frank Herbert’s Dune has something of that nature too.
Of course, there are all the British colonial tales of people “going native” in various parts of the Empire, which fit well with the template of the human enclave in an alien civilisation.
Actually, thinking about it, you could make some interesting comparisons between Paul Atreides and Lawrence of Arabia, though I think I’m wandering off topic slightly…
I’m going to suggest a subversion of this theme, written by Ursula K. Leguin: The Word for World is Forest
In a reversal of the usual plotline, it is not a human that learns about the natives, but a native that learns about a human endeavour, namely war.
mikeda@14: Yeah, that’s it–and that was in the original list, wasn’t it? I got confused because my searches kept turning up a different book called After Long Silence.
My memory is that Eleanor Arnason’s A Woman of the Iron People fits this description, and maybe Ring of Swords too. It also feels like Andre Norton territory, maybe Storm over Warlock and Judgment on Janus. Michael Bishop’s Transfigurations might also fit the bill.
Thinking about this some more, I wonder if you wouldn’t find a bunch of this type of story in a list of anthropological science fiction. Maybe another model for this subgenre is the anthropologist living with the people she or he is studying. Although castaway stories such as Melville’s Typee might provide yet another model.
There is a little funny book from Frederik Pohl that also fits in the trope, I think, although from a slightly different perspective: “Oh, Pioneer!” A review I found at Amazon.com says it nicely:
“Ace computer hacker Evesham Giyt immigrates to the planet Tupelo with his ex-hooker wife, Rina, and stumbles into the position of mayor of a colony that includes members of four other alien races in addition to humankind. His troubles begin when he discovers a conspiracy masterminded by a coterie of xenophobic humans intent on securing control of the planet.”
I’ve read it and it is a very interesting take on the trope. The aliens are interesting and intensily amusing – and of course, this makes you empathize with THEM and not with the humans who want the colony all for themselves. Satyrical and interesting.
Speaking of Heinlein,
Stranger in a Strange Land is so closely related to this story (the boy raised by Aliens brings back wisdom to the earth) and if you want to argue that this is like- a sequel to the trope (what happens after) then go back and read the first book (Red Planet) where the story of Michael’s parents is told.
Little Fuzzy by H. Beam Piper is a classic of this type and the book Golden Dreams retells the tale from the Fuzzies point of view. Lonely settler discovers that local animals are actually sentient.
Catalyst by Nina Kiriki Hoffman is just straight this story. Boy colonist gets lost and is held by ALIEN aliens as they try to communicate with him.
Lem’s Solaris.
Terry Pratchett’s Nation kinda works: Mau and Daphne’s cultures are radically different from one another, and they are forced to interact with each other to survive. Since we get to see from both Mau and Daphne’s perspectives, neither is really the alien, although Daphne is definately the more “civilized” and “advanced,” i.e. closest to our own culture(and the plot of the story makes it quite clear that such judgements inherently have no basis in reality), as well as being the sole British person on an island full of alternate-universe Polynesians. The hybrid society that Mau creates with Daphne’s influence is interesting compared to the domination and conquering of the Raiders by First Mate Cox, as well.
There’s also Rex Gordon’s No Man Friday, which at least sort-of follows this pattern. There’s not really the colony, but we do have the protagonist being the sole human interacting with the aliens, and learning to understand them. In other respects, it is quite different though, since the aliens are so very, very alien, that in the end, we are left mainly with thoughts about the nature of our civilisation, not necessarily compared to any other, though there are clear cold war overtones.
It seems that a lot of the books that follow this theme are winners of the Tiptree award.
It’s been a long time since I’ve read it, but does Anne McCaffrey’s Decision at Doona fit that pattern?
I would add “Of the Fall” by Paul J. McAuley. I read this book shortly after it came out in 1989 and loved it. Small, struggling human outpost with limited support from Earth. The aborigines (called “abos” in local slang) are very alien; the humans can’t even tell whether they are sentient. There are conflicts between those who want to respect the abos’ culture and those who don’t think they have one. Some of the humans break away from the confines of the official settlement and “go dingo,” illegally living off the land.
@22:
IIRC Kynes was consciously based on Lawrence of Arabia; can anyone confirm this?
The Blue Sword for a fantasy version.
Suspect #2 referred to the Steerswoman series.