UFOs and Aliens Among Us

Library of Congress                                            

 In the 1940s  and 50s reports of "flying saucers" became an American cultural phenomena. Sightings  of strange objects in the sky became the raw materials for Hollywood to present visions of potential  threats. Posters for films, like Earth vs. the Flying Saucers from 1956  illustrate these fears.  Connected to  ongoing ideas about life on the Moon, the canals on Mars, and ideas about  Martian Civilizations, flying saucers have come to represent the hopes and fears  of the modern world.          Are these alleged visitors from other  worlds peaceful and benevolent or would they attack and destroy humanity? The  destructive power of the Atomic bomb called into question the progressive potential of technology. Fear of the  possibilities for destruction in the Cold War-era proved fertile ground for  terrestrial anxieties to manifest visions of flying saucers and visitors from  other worlds who might be hidden among us in plain sight.          

Aliens Among us and Fears  of the Other

         If UFOs were visiting our world, where were these  extraterrestrials? Could they be hidden among us? Comic books and television illustrates  how the possibility of extraterrestrial visitors reflected anxieties of that era.          The  1962 comic There are  Martians Among Us, from Amazing Fantasy #15, illustrates the way fear of  extraterrestrials could reflect Cold War anxieties. In the comic, a search  party gathers around a landed alien craft, but it can find no sign of alien  beings. Radio announcers warn those nearby to stay indoors. The action shifts  to a husband and wife as he prepares to leave their home despite a television  announcer's warning to remain indoors. As he waves goodbye he reminds his wife  to stay inside. The wife however decides to slip out to the store and is  attacked and dragged off. The husband returns home and finding it empty runs  towards the telephone in a panic. In a twist, the anxious husband reveals that  he and his wife are the Martians.          The fear that there might be alien enemies in our midst  resonates with fears of Soviets and communists from the McCarthy era.  Ultimately, in this story, the humans are the ones who accost and capture the  alien woman. The shift in perspective puts the humans in the position of the  monsters.          

UFOs as Contemporary  Folklore

         Aside from  depictions of UFOs in media, UFOs are also part of American folk culture. Ideas  of aliens and flying saucers are a part of the mythology of America. You can find documentation  of these kinds of experiences in folk life collections. An interview with Howard Miller about hunting and hound dogs, collected as part of Tending the Commons: Folklife and Landscape in Southern West  Virginia collection, documents an individual's experience with a  potential UFO sighting.          In A mysterious light, a segment of an ethnographic  interview, Miller describes a strange light he saw once while hunting with his  dogs in 1966 "All at once it was daylight, and I looked up to see what  happened. There was a light about that big, going up, drifting up the hill.  When I looked and seen it just faded out. I've been in the Marines, and know  what airplane lights look like, and it was too big for that." When asked if he  knew what it was he offered, "I don't know what it was" but went on to explain,  "If there is any such thing as a UFO that's what that was." This unexplained  light on a walk in the woods is typical of many stories of these kinds of  encounters. It's not only the media that tells stories and represents these  kinds of ideas, documentation of the experiences and stories Americans tell  each other is similarly important for understanding and interpreting what UFOs meant  to 20th century America.          

Skepticism of UFOs and Alien Encounters

         Scientists and  astronomers express varying degrees of enthusiasm for the possibility of intelligent  life in the universe. However, scientists generally dismiss the idea that there  are aliens visiting Earth. In Pale Blue Dot:  A Vision of the Human Future in Space, Carl Sagan  reviews the possibilities of alien visitors to Earth, and suggests that there  is good reason to be skeptical of them. Much of Sagan's work focuses on debunking  folk stories and beliefs and tries to encourage more rigorous and skeptical  thought. He similarly discussed criticism of beliefs in alien visitors in his  earlier book, Demon  Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark.          This zealous  criticism of belief in UFOs from Sagan, who was well known for his speculative  ideas about the likelihood of alien civilizations, might seem to be a  contradiction. Sagan himself had even speculated on the possibilities of visits  by ancient aliens in his essay from the early 60s Direct Contact among Galactic Civilizations by Relativistic  Interstellar Spaceflight.          How do we reconcile Sagan the skeptic with the imaginative Sagan?  Far from a contradiction, these two parts of Sagan's perspective offer a  framework for understanding him and the interchange between science and myth about  life on other worlds. Skepticism and speculative imagination come together as  two halves of the whole. It's essential to entertain and explore new ideas,  however strange, while at the same time testing and  evaluating the validity of those ideas.