Popularized be the 1897 book The War of the Worlds by
H. G. Wells, the concept was commonly used throughout the 1950s and 60s, primarily as an allegory for Soviet infiltration and invasion. The 1960s American television series Star Trek introduced the concept of the "
Prime Directive", a regulation intended to limit the negative consequences of first contact.
The conceptual idea of humans encountering an extraterrestrial intelligence for the first time dates back to the second century AD, where it is presented in the novel A True Story by
Lucian of Samosata.[3] The 1752 novel Le Micromégas by
Voltaire depicts a visit of an alien from a planet circling
Sirius to the
Solar system. Micromegas, being 120,000
royal feet (38.9 km) tall, first arrives at Saturn, where he befriends a Saturnian. They both eventually reach the Earth, where using a magnifying glass, they discern humans, and eventually engage in philosophical disputes with them. While superficially it may be classified as an early example of science fiction, the aliens are used only as a technique to involve outsiders to comment on Western civilization, a trope popular at the times.[citation needed]
The first notable example of intelligent aliens invading the Earth is The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells, in which
Martians mount a global
invasion of Earth.[4]
Throughout the 1950s, stories involving first contact were common in the United States, and typically involved conflict. Professor of Communication
Victoria O'Donnell writes that these films "presented indirect expressions of anxiety about the possibility of a
nuclear holocaust or a Communist invasion of America. These fears were expressed in various guises, such as aliens using mind control, monstrous mutants unleashed by
radioactive fallout, radiation's terrible effects on human life, and scientists obsessed with dangerous experiments." Most films of this kind have an optimistic ending. She reviewed four major topics in these films: (1) Extraterrestrial travel, (2) alien invasion and infiltration, (3) mutants, metamorphosis, and resurrection of extinct species, and (4)
near annihilation or the end of the Earth.[5]
The 1951 film The Day the Earth Stood Still was one of the first works to portray first contact as an overall beneficial event.[6] While the character of Klaatu is primarily concerned with preventing conflicts spreading from Earth, the film warns of the dangers of
nuclear war.[7][8] Based on
the 1954 serialized novel, the 1956 film Invasion of the Body Snatchers depicts an alien infiltration, with the titular Body Snatchers overtaking the fiction town of Santa Mira. Similarly to The Day the Earth Stood Still, Invasion of the Body Snatchers reflects contemporary fears in the United States, particularly
the fear of communist infiltration and takeover.[9]
The original pilot episode for Star Trek, "
The Cage", presented the issue of first contact.[13] As "The Cage" was never broadcast, "
The Man Trap" was the first episode to portray first contact. The 21st episode, "
The Return of the Archons", introduced the Prime Directive, created by producer and screenwriter
Gene L. Coon.[14] Since its creation, the Prime Directive has become a stable of Star Trek,[15] and the concept of a non-interference directive has become common throughout science fiction.[16]
The 1996 novel The Sparrow starts with the discovery of an artificial radio signal, though it deals mainly with the issue of faith.[19]The Arrival (1996), Independence Day, and Star Trek: First Contact were released in 1996. The Arrival portrays both an indirect first contact through the discovery of a radio signal, as well as an alien infiltration similar to that of Invasion of the Body Snatchers;[20]Independence Day portrays an alien invasion similar in theme and tone to The War of the Worlds;[21] and Star Trek: First Contact portrays first contact as a beneficial and peaceful event that ultimately led to the creation of the
United Federation of Planets.[22]
The 2021 novel Project Hail Mary depicts an unintended first contact scenario when the protagonist, Ryland Grace, encounters an alien
starship while on a scientific mission to
Tau Ceti.[29]
Types
Due to the broad definition of first contact, there are many variations of the methods that result in first contact and the nature of the subsequent interaction.[30]
The idea of an alien invasion is one of the earliest and most common portrayals of a first contact scenario, being popular since The War of the Worlds.[31] During the
Cold War, films depicting alien invasions common. The depiction of the aliens tended to reflect the American conception of the Soviet Union at the time, with infiltration stories being a variation of the theme.[32]
A
Bracewell probe is any form of probe of extraterrestrial origin, and such technology appears in first contact fiction. Initially hypothesized in 1960 by
Ronald N. Bracewell, a Bracewell probe is a form of alien
artifact that would permit real–time communication.[33] A
Big Dumb Object is a common variation of the Bracewell probe, primarily referring to
megastructures such as
ringworlds,[34] but also relatively smaller objects that are either located on the surface of planets or natural satellites (such as the
Monoliths in the Space Odyssey series), or transiting through the solar system (such as Rama in Rendezvous with Rama).[35][36]
A technosignature is any of a variety of detectable
spectral signatures that indicate the presence or effects of technology.[37] An
extraterrestrial radio signal is a specific form of technosignature. The most commonly looked for technosignature, the first search for them began in 1960 with
Project Ozma.[38] The
Wow! signal has been considered to be the most likely candidate for an extraterrestrial radio signal, although its cause remains undetermined.[39][40]
Based on the 1940 short story "
Farewell to the Master",[41]The Day the Earth Stood Still depicts the arrival of a single alien, Klaatu, and a robot,
Gort, in a
flying saucer, which lands in
Washington, D.C. Upon emerging from the flying saucer, Klaatu is shot by a soldier, after which he is taken to
Walter Reed Army Medical Center. When he is told that he will be unable to address the leaders of the world simultaneously, he escapes the medical center and spends time among humans in order to understand their attitudes. After meeting with Professor Barnhardt, Klaatu informs him that the people of other planets are concerned that the violence of humans could spread, and are prepared to eliminate Earth if necessary. Klaatu then causes all non–essential electrical devices to cease operating. After being killed and revived, Klaatu warns humanity of the danger of continued hostilities.[42]
In the film, humanity's response to first contact is hostility, demonstrated both at the beginning when Klaatu is wounded, and when he is killed near the end. First contact is used as an example of a global issue that is ignored in favor of continuing international competition, with the decision by the United States government to treat Klaatu as a security threat and eventually enact
martial law in Washington, D.C. being allegorical for the Second Red Scare.[43] The film is widely considered to be one of the best science fiction films.[44][45]
In December 2007, it was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United States
Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the
National Film Registry.[46][47] A Special Edition was released theatrically in 1980. Spielberg agreed to create this edition to add more scenes that they had been unable to include in the original release, with the studio demanding a controversial scene depicting the interior of the extraterrestrial mothership.[48] Spielberg's dissatisfaction with the altered ending scene led to a third version, the Director's Cut on VHS and
LaserDisc in 1998 (and later
DVD and
Blu-ray). It is the longest version, combining Spielberg's favorite elements from both previous editions but removing the scenes inside the mothership.[49] The film was later
remastered in
4K and was then re-released in theaters in 2017 for its 40th anniversary.[50]
Within the Star Trek universe, first contact is a central part of the operations of
Starfleet.[51] While primarily depicted in the television shows, it has also been in a majority of the movies.[52] The Prime Directive is one of the foundational regulations regarding first contact in Star Trek, and has been portrayed in every television series.[51] Despite its importance, it is frequently violated.[53]
Star Trek: The Original Series
In the original pilot episode for Star Trek, the crew of the Starship
USS Enterprise encounter the Talosians, subterranean
humanoids with
telepathic abilities, when attempting to rescue the survivors of a crash. While the episode wasn't broadcast until 1988, it was incorporated into the second season of Star Trek in the episode "
The Menagerie".[13]
The Prime Directive, also known as Starfleet General Order 1, was introduced in the 21st episode "The Return of the Archons".[51] In–universe, it is intended to prevent unintended negative consequences from first contact with technologically inferior societies, particularly those that lack
faster-than-light travel.[54]
The War of the Worlds has been both popular (having never been out of print) and influential, spawning numerous feature films, radio dramas, a record album, comic book adaptations, television series, and sequels or parallel stories by other authors. It was memorably dramatised in a
1938 radio programme, directed by and starring
Orson Welles, that reportedly caused panic among listeners who did not know that the events were fictional.[60] The novel even influenced the work of scientists.
Robert H. Goddard was inspired by the book, and helped develop both the
liquid-fuelled rocket and
multistage rocket, which resulted in the
Apollo 11Moon landing 71 years later.[61][62]
1960s: The Star Trek television franchise explored the theme in depth and introduced the concept of the
Federation'sPrime Directive— a law forbidding first contact (or covert interference) with any races not sufficiently advanced for such an encounter, using capability for faster-than-light travel as the basic benchmark for first contact. The movie Star Trek: First Contact depicts humanity's first contact with an alien culture, the
Vulcan race, in
Bozeman,
Montana on 5 April 2063, after the passing Vulcans' attention is attracted by the detection of the energy signature from scientist
Zefram Cochrane launching humanity's first
warp flight. In the Star Trek: Enterprise episode Carbon Creek, it is revealed that Vulcans first made contact with humans in Carbon Creek, Pennsylvania in 1957, without revealing themselves as aliens. A Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "
First Contact" explored the scenario from the opposite viewpoint when a Human,
William Riker, is injured on an alien world while disguised as an inhabitant of the planet's civilization (which had no previous knowledge of extraterrestrials). Another notable depiction of first contact in Star Trek: The Next Generation is the episode "
Darmok" where humanity (in this case the United Federation of Planets) makes first contact with a race called the Tamarians, a species that exclusively communicates with metaphors.
A major theme of a number of works of
Stanisław Lem, the most well known being Solaris (while his most thorough examination can be found in His Master's Voice), is the inherent impossibility of meaningful communication with alien races.[64]
1969: All Judgment Fled by
James White features the political and psychological stresses imposed by first contact when a six-man team of astronauts is sent to investigate an alien ship that has taken up an orbit near
Mars. It has been cited by the science fiction author and editor
Mike Resnick as a particularly notable contribution to the type.[65]
1970s
1972: The novel The Gods Themselves by
Isaac Asimov explores simultaneously the potential unity of all races, and the possibility of conflict inherent in all first contacts: even as members of different races understand each other, their disparate ways may endanger both their worlds, even the fabric of their respective universes. This gap between individuals and their respective societies is characteristic of the First Contact plot of E.T. Other explorations of the theme in popular culture include encounters with predatory or semi-sentient races as in Alien and Independence Day.
1974: Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle's The Mote in God's Eye was written to be, in Niven's words, "the epitome of first contact novels". Here it is humanity that plays the role of visiting aliens, as the religious, technological, political, psychological, military, cultural, and biological implications of first contact are explored.
The theme of first contact, ranging from friendly collaboration to menace or conflict, has been visualized a number of films and television series. Among the more famous are
Steven Spielberg's film Close Encounters of the Third Kind and the television series V.
1980s: By contrast, in the works of
Iain M. Banks, the Contact division of the galactic civilization calling itself
the Culture (which features in the majority of Banks' science fiction) frequently manipulates less advanced civilizations, steering them towards peaceful progress, especially those that may become aggressive or dangerous, under the pretext of maintaining the balance of galactic power; a notable exception being the short story The State of the Art, in which the Culture decides not to contact Earth so they can use it as a
control against which they can measure their manipulations of other societies. Novels such as The Player of Games and Look to Windward delve into the psychology of first inter-species contact in considerable depth. In the novel Excession, Banks coins the phrase Outside Context Problem in relation to first contact.[citation needed]
1980s:
Gary Larson occasionally used a humorous version of the theme in his The Far Side comics, such as showing an alien falling down the steps of a
flying saucer, thereby ruining a dramatic entrance.
1990s: Examples of the mutual inscrutability and the potentially unbridgeable gaps between races which—by their very natures—are just too different to bond or even to accept each other, include
Stephen Baxter's Xeelee Sequence concept of the dark matter photino birds, the god-like Firstborn from
Arthur C. Clarke's Time Odyssey series, and
Stanisław Lem's planet Solaris and the events of the novel Fiasco. In other cases, such as Greg Bear's The Forge of God and Anvil of Stars, or Bruce Sterling's Schismatrix, aliens are presented as falling into a highly diverse spectrum, some easily relating with humans, others too alien for meaningful communication.
1996: The Sparrow by anthropology-trained
Mary Doria Russell draws parallels with early Jesuit explorations and the philosophical or religious ethics which surround first contact
In the novel Halo: Contact Harvest, humanity's first contact with aliens is on a human agricultural colony, where an initially peaceful meeting (although preceded by aliens walking into an anti-insurgent trap set up human military) with an alien alliance known as the
Covenant turns violent, eventually resulting in a 27-year war.
The backstory of Mass Effect features the First Contact War, caused by an alien military patrol observing a human ship, which was unknowingly breaching galaxy-wide conventions, attacking it and occupying a seemingly poorly defended colony, only to learn of humanity's military prowess in a swift counterattack. The conflict was quickly smothered by the galactic community, but the reputation and bitterness persist until the events of the games.
^Hughes, David Y.;
Geduld, Harry M. (1993). A Critical Edition of The War of the Worlds: H.G. Wells's Scientific Romance. Indiana University Press.
ISBN0-253-32853-5.
^Ann Weinstone (July 1994).
"Resisting Monsters: Notes on "Solaris"". Science Fiction Studies. 21 (2). SF-TH Inc: 173–190.
JSTOR4240332."Lem's critique of colonialism, as he broadly defines it,9 is articulated by
Snow, one of the other scientists on the space station, who says in the book's
most frequently quoted passage:
We are humanitarian and chivalrous; we don't want to enslave other races, we
simply want to bequeath them our values and take over their heritage in exchange.
We think of ourselves as the Knights of the Holy Contact. This is another lie. We
are only seeking Man. We have no need of other worlds. We need mirrors. (§6:72)"
^Resnick, Mike.
"Introduction from The White Papers". sectorgeneral.com. Archived from the original on 14 January 2002. Retrieved 1 June 2023.{{
cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (
link)
Sources
Parrinder, Patrick (2000). Learning from Other Worlds: Estrangement, Cognition, and the Politics of Science Fiction and Utopia. Liverpool University Press.
ISBN0-8532-3574-0.
OL22421185M.
"Encyclopedia of Extraterrestrial Encounters" by Ronald Story (2001)
ISBN0-451-20424-7 (It was the result of a collaborative Extraterrestrial Encyclopedia Project (ETEP);
excerpts onlineArchived 24 October 2012 at the
Wayback Machine)