Jump to content

Neanderthals in popular culture

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Bluej100 (talk | contribs) at 19:29, 27 March 2010 (In novels and short stories). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In popular idiom the word Neanderthal is sometimes used as an insult, to suggest that a person combines a deficiency in intelligence and a propensity toward brute force, as well as perhaps implying that the person is old-fashioned or attached to outdated ideas, much in the same way as "dinosaur" or "Yahoo" is also used. Counterbalancing this are sympathetic literary portrayals of Neanderthals, as in the novel The Inheritors by William Golding and Jean M. Auel's Earth's Children series, or the more serious treatment by palaeontologist Björn Kurtén, in several works including Dance of the Tiger, and British psychologist Stan Gooch in his hybrid-origin theory of humans.

A popular series of television advertisements by GEICO have modernized Neanderthals upset at the "racist" depictions of them as "cave-men" and the provocative slogan: "So easy even a caveman can do it!"

Bill Cosby did a sketch about Neanderthals and Sabertooth Tigers on one of his albums, I Started Out as a Child.

In novels and short stories

Science fiction has depicted Neanderthals in novels and short stories in several ways:

  • Neanderthals appear in H. G. Wells' short story "The Grisly Folk", which portrays them as savage and barbaric creatures who deserved their fate of extinction.
  • L. Sprague de Camp's 1939 short story "The Gnarly Man" featured an immortal Neanderthal living in the modern world.
  • Poul Anderson's story "The Nest" is told from the point of view of a Neanderthal who finds himself in a peculiar time-traveling colony mixing people from various time periods and locations. He eventually has a crucial role in forging an alliance of people from very many different backgrounds, together fighting the story's villains - bandit adventurers from Medieval Norman Sicily aided by 20th Century Nazis. Eventually, he is able to return to his own time from which he was kidnapped, but finds Neanderthal society (his name for his kind is simply "The Men") too boring and settles on a career of time-traveling adventures along with a Russian woman he fell in love with.
  • In The Ugly Little Boy by Isaac Asimov, a Neanderthal child is brought into the present via time travel. Neanderthals are sympathetically depicted as having an articulate and sophisticated society and language, in conscious rebuttal of the above stereotype.
  • Philip K. Dick's novel "The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike" uses as a plot device the discovery of a Neanderthal skull in the United States. Neanderthal were also shown as living in primitive towns in the rural areas of the former United States in his book The Simulacra
  • A Neanderthal named Java appeared as a supporting character in the adventures of Metamorpho the Element Man by DC Comics. He was inspired by the Java Man.
  • In the Riverworld series, Philip José Farmer introduces a prominent Neanderthal character named Kazz, who interacts with modern humans. Jose Farmer's novella The Alley Man concerns a Neanderthal whose family has survived into modern times.
  • Michael Crichton's 1976 novel Eaters of the Dead places a small Neanderthal population in Europe as the source of the battles recorded in Beowulf. This novel was also a base for a motion picture The 13th Warrior (1999), though the word "Neanderthals" was never mentioned in the movie.
  • Neanderthals appear as characters in Jean M. Auel's "Earth's Children" Series, including the 1986 movie adaptation of the first book, The Clan of the Cave Bear
  • A main character in Alfredo Castelli's comic book Martin Mystère is a Neanderthal called Java.. Martin Mystère found him in Mongolia, home to the last population of Neanderthals. He is named after the Java Man remains.
  • Colin Wilson discusses evidence and theories of Neanderthal survival into the modern age, including the possibility of their recent breeding with humans, in his book "Unsolved Mysteries".
  • In the 1989 Doctor Who serial Ghost Light a Neanderthal named Nimrod is a butler. He shows good intelligence throughout the serial. Neanderthals also appear in the 2005 New Series Adventures spin-off novel Only Human where they also show good intelligence but struggle with concepts such as fiction and lies, and they appear to not understand why humans 'are always making things up'
  • The clash between the last of the Neanderthals and the emerging race of Homo sapiens is portrayed in A.A. Attanasio's 1991 novel 'Hunting the Ghost Dancer'.
  • Harry Harrison describes a Neanderthal population in Norway and Sweden in his Alternate History "Hammer and the Cross" series. In these books, Neanderthals hybridize with H. sapiens and are the basis for troll legends.
  • The short-lived animated series Cro centered around a Cro-Magnon child being adopted by a tribe of Neanderthals.
  • In Harry Turtledove's novella Down in the Bottomlands (a scenario where the Mediterranean Sea has stayed dry since the Miocene), Europe is inhabited by Homo neanderthalensis to modern times.
  • In John Darnton's 1996 novel Neanderthal a group of surviving Neanderthals is discovered in the mountains of Afghanistan. In the novel Neanderthals are said to possess the ability to read minds due to their larger cranial capacity. However, in the novel, Darnton denied that Neanderthals had, unlike Cro-Magnons, gained the capability of deception on more than two levels at a time, any more than any known specimens of great ape had. He blamed the near-extinction of the Neanderthals on this shortcoming.
  • In Mark Canter's 1996 novel Ember from the Sun, a frozen Neanderthal embryo is implanted in a modern woman.
  • In William Shatner's Quest for Tomorrow series of novels, Neanderthals were a primitive psychic species which caught the eye of a large alien empire. They decided to try to isolate the telepathic gene and transplanted several subjects to another world. The original Neanderthals were eliminated so that no one else gets the same idea. The homo sapiens were left alone. The transplanted Neanderthals eventually evolved into an industrial society. However, this took much longer than it did for humanity, as a telepathic species would have problems inventing complex technology without the use of writing - an unnecessary tool for telepaths. The Neanderthals eventually joined together and transcended their physical shape, becoming a god-like being.
  • In The Silk Code by Paul Levinson (winner of 1999 Locus Award for Best First Novel), Neanderthals are still living in Basque country in 750 AD, and a few survive in the present world.
  • The T'lan Imass characters in the anthropologically-rooted fantasy series Malazan Book of the Fallen appear to be physiologically based on the Neanderthals.
  • In Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next series of novels Neanderthals are portrayed as having been brought back from extinction by cloning to act as medical test subjects thanks to their close relation to Homo sapiens but lack of legal status as human beings. Following a public outcry at the practice they go on to fill low paying jobs. They have an amazing ability to "read minds" from tiny facial movements and indistinct body-language, even into detail such as marital status, job and true love's identity; it is said by Neanderthals that faces can form verbs. They can instantly spot a liar, and therefore respect humans more if they say exactly what they mean, no matter how offensive or obtuse. Their art is abstract, but they can instantly understand it as if it were photorealistic, and they will never work, play or even walk in the rain, to show it respect.
  • Robert J. Sawyer's Neanderthal Parallax trilogy portrays contact with an alternate world where Neanderthals, not Homo sapiens, became the dominant species. The first book in this series, Hominids, won the Hugo Award in 2003. (Sawyer's 1997 novel Frameshift used Neanderthal DNA as an element of a plot set in modern-day America.)
  • In Darwin's Radio by Greg Bear (winner of 2003 Nebula Award), a phenomenon which caused the Neanderthals to die off now threatens modern humans.
  • Stephen Baxter's Manifold: Origin prominently features Neanderthals from an alternate timeline. This is a sequel to Manifold: Space where Neanderthal characters also appear, in a narrower context, as genetically engineered slave laborers.
  • The novel Heaven by Ian Stewart and Jack Cohen features spacefaring Neanderthals who were removed from Earth by powerful aliens for unspecified reasons.
  • In S. M. Stirling's novel The Sky People, neanderthals inhabit an alternate-history Venus.
  • In the novel The Days Of Peleg by Jon Saboe, the Neanderthals are a group of religious dissidents forced into hiding by the Babylonian Emperor Sargon and his conquering army.
  • In Orson Scott Card's anthology Keeper of Dreams, the story "Heal Thyself" describes the accidental resurrection of Neanderthals during testing of an immune system enhancement.

In film

"The 13th Warrior" film (1999), which was based on the Michael Crichton's 1976 novel Eaters of the Dead.

"Clan of the Cave Bear" film (1986) was adapted from the Auel's novel.

"The Iceman" film (1984), from a screenplay written by John Drimmer, depicts a frozen Neanderthal coming to life again in modern times.

" In Night at the Museum, four Neanderthals were put on display on the American Museum of Natural History. Due to the Tablet of Akhemrah, a table from the ancient Egypt, everything on display on the museum, including them, came to life nighttime. After that Larry Daley, the nightguard, showed them fire, they gained an interest in it.

  • The Death metal band Neandertahl, based in Manchester, UK, are named after the Neanderthal.