http://scroll.in/article/743619/the-fiction-of-the-100-million-search-for-et-and-earth-like-planets

SCIENCE FICTION
The fiction of the $100-million search for ET and Earth-like planets

The discovery of an Earth-like planet and a new $100-million quest for
extra-terrestrial intelligence shows life imitating sci-fi art.
Arnab Chakraborty  · Yesterday · 03:30 pm

The fiction of the $100-million search for ET and Earth-like planets


“The only truly alien planet is Earth”. That was J. G. Ballard's
famous dictum when it came to a complete overhaul of the priorities of
science fiction in the 1960s. And it makes sense too, when you think
about it. When it comes to devising alien creatures fictionally, we
draw almost all our inspirations from the diverse forms of animal life
on Earth, humans included, as well as plants.

Some of these creatures are far more intricately engineered and
meticulously conceived by the powers that be, than your average alien
monstrosity concocted by Hollywood. But there's the rub, as it were:
why this need to keep inventing alien terrains and creatures, when
there is already so much we do not know about?

For alien life and first contact are the truly hoary old standards of
science fiction. They've arguably been around for almost as long as
the genre has existed: if not imaginatively stationed on other worlds,
they have almost certainly, in some form or the other, been
extrapolated into our own. It’s even the sole reason some of us love
science fiction so much in the first place. For many, it's the simple
pleasure of marvelling at a truly ingenuous concoction of random
animal body parts that keep them returning to their favourite genre,
and for others, it’s the possibilities latent in the entire notion of
alien contact itself.

So it comes as no surprise when Stephen Hawking and Yuri Milner
recently announced a $100-million initiative to find intelligent life
out there in the universe. What was a largely fledgeling effort by the
SETI (The Search For Extraterrestial Intelligence) Institute thus far
has now received a cosmic shot in the arm. Almost on cue, NASA
announced its discovery of an Earth-like planet, Kepler 352 – the most
tantaling similarity, perhaps, being that it’s year is 382 days.

While chances are that nothing might ultimately result from either of
these, it's a testament to the sheer human need to know, with some
amount of certainty, just how lonely we truly are in this universe, if
at all.

Thankfully, on the imaginative forefront, science fiction authors of
the 20th century have certainly not been slackers when it comes to
imagining scenarios of first contact, or communication between humans
and aliens. Here are just a few of the most striking examples of what
can be achieved within the genre, and how the convention of first
contact can enable searing glimpses into the achievements and
limitations alike of human imagination:

Way Station, Clifford Simak (1963)
Known largely as someone who brought a pastoral sensibility to a genre
that in lesser hands could quickly devolve into gun-toting space
western, Simak's Way Station envisions an alien visitor who delegates
Enoch Wallace, a Civil War veteran from America, to serve as the
administrator of the eponymous way-station on Earth for
extraterrestrials traveling across galaxies. It is charming in how it
injects a certain mode of storytelling with a renewed awe for the
universe and its beings at large, very reminiscent at times of Olaf
Stapledon's ouevre.

Roadside Picnic, Arkady and Boris Strugatsky (1971)
Those thrown off balance by the difficult Tarkovsky adaptation Stalker
should give the source material a serious try, as it's one of the most
disturbing meditations on the subject ever penned. Aliens have visited
Earth and left, without any intimation as to why they arrived and how.
But in their wake they have left behind zones littered with objects
that are intriguing and often dangerous in how they defy Earth
physics. These zones draw humans to them like moths to the fire, and
in the historical context of the Soviet Union in which it was written,
and the severe censorship its publication entailed, it's easy to see
that it touched a nerve, or several. But it does so without
disintegrating into allegory, and that is just one of its many
strengths.

The Fifth Head of Cerberus, Gene Wolfe (1972)
Probably the trickiest book on this list, as well as being the most
difficult, although not for lack of the quality of writing. If
anything, it's one of the most beautifully written books on alien
contact ever published, with inspirations from Proust and Kafka
abound. The book centres around a human colony on an alien planet, who
have allegedly wiped out the local native population. However, by the
end of the fragmented narrative, a truly sinister hypothesis is
provided some startling justification. One of the earliest
examinations of Post-colonialism in science fiction, it rewards the
reader exponentially on the re-read, as is the case with any Gene
Wolfe novel.

Gateway, Frederik Pohl (1977)
The Grand Master's masterpiece, Gateway is yet again one of those
science fiction novels purportedly on aliens: where the aliens are
only ever hinted at, since all they've left behind for a far future
dystopia-tinged humanity are spacecrafts replete with weird tech. No
one knows how they exactly work, or where they go, but soon it becomes
an occasion for games of cosmic Russian Roulette. For the spacecrafts
can either carry you to places that make you rich, or kill you in the
process. Or worse.

At The Mountains of Madness, H. P. Lovecraft (1931)
Antarctica has been a source of inspiration for many stories in the
realm of science fiction, such as Who Goes There? by John W. Campbell,
Jr. (later filmed as The Thing by John Carpenter, in 1982) thanks to
its desolate immensity and frigid terrain, and it also became the
setting of what many claim is Lovecraft's finest. Scientific explorers
find remains of ancient lifeforms that adhere to no known psychology
known to man, and soon the reader is made privy to the existence of
the Old Ones. Underlying it all is the central philosophy accentuating
all of Lovecraft's fiction: that man is ineffective in the face of the
cosmos and its ways, and ultimately irrelevant. Also, Lovecraft's
attention to the exhaustive detail points to his then emerging need to
vindicate the imaginative process with a scientific methodology and
temperament.

Oh, and apparently there's a Guillermo Del Toro movie in the works too!

One could go on to include several more novels; the list is virtually
endless: Solaris, by Stanislaw Lem, Blindsight, by Peter Watts, Sarah
Canary, by Karen Joy Fowler are all superb examples of what critic
Darko Suvin called “cognitive estrangement”, utilising
extraterrestrials. But you might soon find as you begin reading them,
that it's not so much about how the aliens look and how many
appendages they possess. Instead, if you read between the lines, what
soon emerges is simply that the “novum”of alien contact becomes a
fascinating means of examining gross human insecurities and
limitations, in all its creative regalia. Although I'd be the last
person to argue against the simpler joys of visualising tentacles and
serrated teeth myself.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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