Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Role of science fiction in conceptualising the ...

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Role of science fiction in conceptualising the reproductive future: a linguistic and literary perspective

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

E-pub ahead of print

Standard

Role of science fiction in conceptualising the reproductive future: a linguistic and literary perspective. / Krendel, Alexandra; Ryder, Mike.
In: Medical Humanities, 26.03.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Krendel A, Ryder M. Role of science fiction in conceptualising the reproductive future: a linguistic and literary perspective. Medical Humanities. 2025 Mar 26. Epub 2025 Mar 26. doi: 10.1136/medhum-2024-013207

Author

Bibtex

@article{976ba15e546f4da1892ada8db67c2237,
title = "Role of science fiction in conceptualising the reproductive future: a linguistic and literary perspective",
abstract = "In this paper, we explore how members of the public invoke science fiction tropes and references in response to the topic of complete ectogenesis (where the entire development of a fetus takes place outside of the human body in an artificial womb environment) and, to a lesser extent, genome editing. This paper addresses a critical research gap as fiction is central to how the public make sense of new technologies. This research is timely, as human clinical trials of artificial placenta and womb technology are expected to start within the next few years. We argue that gauging public opinion on this technology is a critical early step in understanding how the public might respond to such new technologies, should they become available in the near future and be presented in a particular fashion. Using corpus linguistic techniques, we analysed a large dataset of 15 548 YouTube comments (382 057 words) made in response to a video that depicts a fictional artificial womb facility, which went viral in December 2022 when some viewers believed it to be real. We identified several statistically significant trends, as commenters associated the video with science fiction, horror and dystopian fiction, while also making specific reference to Aldous Huxley, Brave New World and Star Wars (Clone Wars). These observations reveal how popular science fiction narratives serve as a key point of reference and that they stand as a powerful warning in the public imagination, and as a potential barrier to public acceptance of new reproductive technologies—despite the potential benefits for social justice and reproductive rights. Our findings therefore have implications for how scientific developments are communicated to the general public.",
keywords = "Ectogenesis, Reproduction, Brave New World, EctoLife, YouTube, Science Fiction",
author = "Alexandra Krendel and Mike Ryder",
year = "2025",
month = mar,
day = "26",
doi = "10.1136/medhum-2024-013207",
language = "English",
journal = "Medical Humanities",
issn = "1468-215X",
publisher = "BMJ Publishing Group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Role of science fiction in conceptualising the reproductive future

T2 - a linguistic and literary perspective

AU - Krendel, Alexandra

AU - Ryder, Mike

PY - 2025/3/26

Y1 - 2025/3/26

N2 - In this paper, we explore how members of the public invoke science fiction tropes and references in response to the topic of complete ectogenesis (where the entire development of a fetus takes place outside of the human body in an artificial womb environment) and, to a lesser extent, genome editing. This paper addresses a critical research gap as fiction is central to how the public make sense of new technologies. This research is timely, as human clinical trials of artificial placenta and womb technology are expected to start within the next few years. We argue that gauging public opinion on this technology is a critical early step in understanding how the public might respond to such new technologies, should they become available in the near future and be presented in a particular fashion. Using corpus linguistic techniques, we analysed a large dataset of 15 548 YouTube comments (382 057 words) made in response to a video that depicts a fictional artificial womb facility, which went viral in December 2022 when some viewers believed it to be real. We identified several statistically significant trends, as commenters associated the video with science fiction, horror and dystopian fiction, while also making specific reference to Aldous Huxley, Brave New World and Star Wars (Clone Wars). These observations reveal how popular science fiction narratives serve as a key point of reference and that they stand as a powerful warning in the public imagination, and as a potential barrier to public acceptance of new reproductive technologies—despite the potential benefits for social justice and reproductive rights. Our findings therefore have implications for how scientific developments are communicated to the general public.

AB - In this paper, we explore how members of the public invoke science fiction tropes and references in response to the topic of complete ectogenesis (where the entire development of a fetus takes place outside of the human body in an artificial womb environment) and, to a lesser extent, genome editing. This paper addresses a critical research gap as fiction is central to how the public make sense of new technologies. This research is timely, as human clinical trials of artificial placenta and womb technology are expected to start within the next few years. We argue that gauging public opinion on this technology is a critical early step in understanding how the public might respond to such new technologies, should they become available in the near future and be presented in a particular fashion. Using corpus linguistic techniques, we analysed a large dataset of 15 548 YouTube comments (382 057 words) made in response to a video that depicts a fictional artificial womb facility, which went viral in December 2022 when some viewers believed it to be real. We identified several statistically significant trends, as commenters associated the video with science fiction, horror and dystopian fiction, while also making specific reference to Aldous Huxley, Brave New World and Star Wars (Clone Wars). These observations reveal how popular science fiction narratives serve as a key point of reference and that they stand as a powerful warning in the public imagination, and as a potential barrier to public acceptance of new reproductive technologies—despite the potential benefits for social justice and reproductive rights. Our findings therefore have implications for how scientific developments are communicated to the general public.

KW - Ectogenesis

KW - Reproduction

KW - Brave New World

KW - EctoLife

KW - YouTube

KW - Science Fiction

U2 - 10.1136/medhum-2024-013207

DO - 10.1136/medhum-2024-013207

M3 - Journal article

JO - Medical Humanities

JF - Medical Humanities

SN - 1468-215X

ER -