Mars in fiction

This image shows an artist's conception of the Mars Excursion Module (MEM) proposed in a NASA study in 1963, a manned mission to Mars concept that failed to pan out.

Fictional representations of Mars have been popular for over a century. Interest in Mars has been stimulated by the planet's dramatic red color, by early scientific speculations that its surface conditions might be capable of supporting life, and by the possibility that Mars could be colonized by humans in the future. Almost as popular as stories about Mars are stories about Martians engaging in activity (frequently invasions) away from their home planet.

In the 20th century, actual spaceflights to the planet Mars, including seminal events such as the first landing of a mechanized device wither operational or not by Russia, and then later the first landing of "the first mechanized device to successfully operate on Mars" in 1976 (in the Viking program by the United States), inspired a great deal of interest in Mars-related fiction. Exploration of the planet has continued in the 21st century on to the present day.

Mars in fiction before Mariner

Before the Mariner 4 spacecraft arrived at Mars in July 1965 and dispelled some of the more exotic theories about the planet, the conventional image of Mars was shaped by the observations of the astronomers Giovanni Schiaparelli, Camille Flammarion and Percival Lowell. Flammarion assumed its red surface came from red-colored vegetation,[1] and Schiaparelli observed what he took to be linear features on the face of Mars, which he thought might be water channels. Because the Italian for channels is canali, English translations tended to render the word as "canals", implying artificial construction. Lowell's books on Mars expanded on this notion of Martian canals, and a standard model of Mars as a drying, cooling, dying world was established. It was frequently speculated that ancient Martian civilizations had constructed irrigation works that spanned the planet in an attempt at saving their dying world. This concept spawned a large number of science fiction scenarios.

The following works of fiction deal with the planet itself, with any assumed Martian civilization as part of its planetary landscape.

Novels and short stories

First ventures

Several early modern writers, including Athanasius Kircher (1602–1680) and Emanuel Swedenborg (1688-1772), hypothesized contact with Mars. Early science fiction about Mars often involved the first voyages to the planet, sometimes as an invasion force, more often for the purposes of exploration.

Early works to 1910
An army of Martian fighting-machines destroying England from a 1906 edition of War of the Worlds
1910s and 1920s
Cover to 1927's Princess of Mars
1930s
Cover to the original edition of C.S. Lewis's first Mars Trilogy novel
1940s
1950s
Dust jacket to the first edition of Fredric Brown's 1955 novel

Living on Mars

By the 1930s, stories about reaching Mars had become somewhat trite, and the focus shifted to Mars as an alien landscape. In the following stories, human contact and basic exploration had taken place sometime in the past; Mars is a setting rather than a goal.

1930s
1940s

|The April 1941 issue of Astonishing Stories in which Asimov's "Heredity" first appeared

1950s and early 1960s
First edition of Phillip K. Dick's 1964 novel Martian Time Slip

Radio, film and television

Mars in fiction after Mariner

Novels and short stories

Beginning in 1965, the Mariner and Viking space probes revealed that the canals were an illusion, and that the Martian environment is extremely hostile to life. By the 1970s, the ideas of canals and ancient civilizations had to be abandoned.

Authors soon began writing stories based on the new Mars (frequently treating it as a desert planet). Most of these works feature humans struggling to tame the planet, and some of them refer to terraforming (using technology to transform a planet's environment to be earthlike).

A common theme, particularly among American writers, is that of a Martian colony fighting for independence from Earth. It appeared already in Heinlein's Red Planet and is a major plot element in Greg Bear's Moving Mars and Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars trilogy. It is also part of the plot of the movie Total Recall and the television series Babylon 5. Many video games also use this concept, such as the Red Faction and Zone of the Enders series. A historical rebellion of Mars against Earth is also mentioned in the Star Trek series of novels, which are not considered canon.

In the decades following Mariner and Apollo, the once-popular subgenre of realistic stories about a first expedition to Mars fell out of fashion, possibly due to the failure of the Apollo Program to continue on to Mars. The early 1990s saw a revival and re-envisioning of realistic novels about Mars expeditions. Early novels in this renaissance were Jack Williamson's novel Beachhead and Ben Bova's novel Mars (both 1992), which envisioned large-scale expeditions to Mars according to the thinking of the 1990s. These were followed by Gregory Benford's The Martian Race (1999), Geoffrey A. Landis's Mars Crossing (2000), and Robert Zubrin's First Landing (2002), which took as their starting points the smaller and more focussed expedition strategies evolved in the late 1990s, mostly building on the concepts of Mars Direct.

Late 1960s and the 1970s

1980s

1990s

2000 to present

Nostalgic Mars fiction

Several post-Mariner works are homages to the older phase of Mars fiction, circumventing the scientific picture of a dry and lifeless Mars with an unbreathable atmosphere through such science fiction generic staples as positing its future terraforming, or creating alternate history versions of Mars, where Burroughs' Barsoom, Bradbury's Martian Chronicles or The War of the Worlds are literal truth.

Nostalgia for the older Mars also frequently appears in comics and role-playing games, particularly of the steampunk genre:

Film and television

Secondary references to Mars in film and television

In the following works of fiction, the Martian setting is of secondary importance to the work as a whole.

Comics

Computer and video games

Role-playing games

Wargames

Music

Martians in fiction

Main article: Martian

The Martian is a favorite character of classical science fiction; he was frequently found away from his home planet, often invading Earth, but sometimes simply a lonely character representing alienness from his surroundings. Martians, other than human beings transplanted to Mars, became rare in fiction after Mariner, except in exercises of deliberate nostalgia – more frequently in some genres, such as comics and animation, than in written literature.

See also

References

  1. NASA - Mars Chronology: Renaissance to the Space Age
  2. Xenology: An Introduction to the Scientific Study of Extraterrestrial Life, Intelligence, and Civilization - Science and Science Fiction
  3. Avatar (2009 film)#Plot
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  5. https://www.gutenberg.org/files/18105/18105.txt
  6. Parise, Tim (2013). "Hyperdrive". The Maui Company. pp. 160–172. Retrieved 2015-09-16.
  7. "Rita Carla Francesca Monticelli, Deserto Rosso". Tom's Hardware (in Italian). Retrieved 2016-10-11.
  8. "Not A Blog: Martians, Come Back". GRRM.livejournal.com. August 24, 2012. Retrieved September 26, 2014.
  9. DeNardo, John (February 14, 2013). "TOC: Old Mars Edited by George R.R. Martin and Gardner Dozois". SF Signal. Retrieved September 26, 2014.
  10. "Outerra - 2013 Retrospective, 2014 Look Ahead". Outerra Blog. Retrieved 27 February 2015.
  11. name="soldonsong"
  12. Nissim, Mayer (January 11, 2016). "David Bowie 1947-2016: 'Life on Mars' is named Bowie's greatest ever song in reader poll". Digital Spy. Retrieved January 23, 2016.
  13. Link to the List of 100 Greatest Songs by Neil McCormick.100 Greatest Songs of All Time: 25 - 1
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