Copyright 2020 by Gary L. Pullman
One way to energize a
genre of fiction is to introduce into it a hierarchy, or some other
type of analytical or descriptive scheme, that is commonly used in a
different type of narrative literature.
As Don
Lincoln, author of Alien Universe:
Extraterrestrial Life in Our Minds and in the Cosmos,
observes, science fiction employs the
scale “popularized” in J. Allen Hynek's “1972 book The
UFO Experience,”
which identifies three types, or “kinds,” of “close encounters”
with extraterrestrial spacecraft or beings:
1st
Kind:
UFO sighting
2nd
Kind:
UFO sighting supported by "physical evidence"
3rd
Kind:
Encounter with alien beings
4th Kind: Abduction with
"retained memory"
5th Kind:
"Regular conversations"
6th Kind:
"An encounter" resulting in a human's "death or
injury"
7th Kind:
Hybrid progeny resulting from human-monstrous mating
Although
hybrid horror-science fiction narratives or dramas sometimes include
extraterrestrial beings (e. g., Stephen King's Dreamcatcher
and such films as Alien,
The Thing from Another World,
and Invaders from Mars),
space aliens are primarily a staple of sci fi fiction. Monsters, on
the other hand, are more often antagonists in horror fiction.
Hynek's
scale, and its extension, provide a means of re-imagining monsters:
1st
Kind:
Monster sighting
2nd
Kind:
Monster sighting supported by "physical evidence"
3rd
Kind:
Encounter with monster(s)
4th
Kind:
Monster's abduction recalled (or recovered through the discovery of a
lost film or video
5th
Kind:
Periodic communications with the monster, vocally or otherwise (e.
g., through mental telepathy)
6th
Kind:
"An encounter” with the monster which results in a human's
“death or injury”
7th
Kind:
Human/monster mating resulting in a hybrid progeny
However, an imaginative use of this extended scale of “close encounters” with monsters, rather than with aliens—which, it could be argued, represent simply another type of monster) can still introduce innovations into the horror genre. For example, the scale could be used to structure a novel or, for that matter a heptalogy, or series of seven works, each of which is inspired by one of the seven types of “close encounters” with monsters listed in the “monster scale” adapted from Hynek's hierarchy.
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