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Pregnancy in science fiction
Numerous
science fiction
,
utopian
and
dystopian
novels revolve around sexual reproduction,
pregnancy
and
infertility
. Some examples:
Brian Aldiss
:
Greybeard
(universal infertility)
Margaret Atwood
:
The Handmaid's Tale
(
1985
) (widespread infertility in a
theocratic
United States)
David Brin
: Glory Season (
1994
) (mixture of
parthenogenesis
and sexual reproduction in a mainly female society)
Anthony Burgess
:
The Wanting Seed
(
1962
)
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
:
Herland
(
1915
) (parthenogenesis in an all-female society)
Aldous Huxley
:
Brave New World
(
1932
) (all children produced in artificial wombs and engineered for specific social niches)
P.D. James
:
The Children of Men
(
1992
) (universal infertility)
Larry Niven
and
Jerry Pournelle
:
The Mote in God's Eye
(
1975
) (alien race that has to continously breed and the consequences of its resulting overpopulation crisis)
Marge Piercy
:
Woman on the Edge of Time
(
1976
) (fetuses raised externally in breeders rather than in the female womb)
John Wyndham
:
The Midwich Cuckoos
(
1957
)
Among themes regularly encountered in science fiction are inter-species reproduction (see
Star Trek
), artificial wombs, and male pregnancy.
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