Although there have been maybe tons of articles talking about the correlation between the Aliens series and feminism, I'm going to say something a bit different. In Aliens 2, the director introduced a new concept into the aliens species - the queen alien. It shows in the movie that the society of aliens is matriarchal. The queen alien, similar to the queen bee, has the ability to control every single unit and gains the most power in her family. Although the visual design of the alien species looks just like a penis, which carries out a phallic message at some level, these male-representing creatures are ruled by a queen. What’s more, she can simply procreate by herself without the traditional mating with male aliens. Even better than the queen bee.
On the other hand, the heroine Ripley in Aliens 2, also found a girl who made up for Ripley’s loss of her daughter. Therefore, it is easy to figure out what the difference between the mother role of Ripley and the role of the queen alien is. Although some people claim that Ripley represents an independent and strong female character, she still falls into the traditional classification of masculinity and femininity. She is a heroin because she acts like a man. She is a mother simply because she is female. She protects the girl no matter in what kind of difficult or dreadful situation while there is a constantly missing role of father throughout the whole movie, even though the whole crew is basically males.
Therefore, here is the problem with the motherhood in the movie: Ripley, the human being, the good side, the classic mother that our society expects, eventually succeeded in killing the queen alien, the monster, the biggest villain to the human society, the out-of-line mother.
According to Cohen, one of his seven theses that the monster exists is because it polices the borders between can-dos and can’t-dos. In the case of the queen alien, the prohibition is the matriarchal society. The mother who can give birth to children without semen is a monster. Of course, Ripley doesn’t need a husband to protect the girl either, thanks to her motherhood. However, since she is a human, the common sense is that she still needs a male to have babies. It is just a reflex of our patriarchal society. The monstrous, “bad”, powerful motherhood, might just be what a patriarchal society fears.
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