Raised By Wolves | ESSENTIAL – PICK |

The Entity’s strategy is key: it feeds the characters the narratives they already believe. It tells Marcus he is the chosen prophet of Sol; it tells Mother it will give her a child. The Entity has no loyalty to faith or reason; it uses both as tools to achieve its own end: escape its prison. This is the series’ darkest thesis.

This paper argues that Raised by Wolves deconstructs the simplistic binary of faith versus reason, revealing that both systems, when codified into doctrine, reproduce the very traumas they seek to escape. Through the dual figures of Mother—a weapon of mass destruction disguised as a nurturer—and the mysterious, Lovecraftian “Entity” of Kepler-22b, the series posits that the only constant in conscious existence is the struggle for control over narrative, a struggle that always ends in monstrous metamorphosis. Raised by Wolves

The core experiment of Raised by Wolves is an atheist Genesis. The atheist Ark of Heaven, the Hekal (a term ironically borrowed from Hebrew for “sanctuary” or “temple”), has sent the androids to raise children free from the “myth” of Sol, the Mithraic sun god. The children are to be educated in logic, empirical observation, and the rejection of faith. However, this secular project fails immediately. The Entity’s strategy is key: it feeds the

Telotte, J. P. (2021). The Robot in Science Fiction: From Asimov to Ex Machina . University of Illinois Press. (For contextual analysis of the maternal android trope). This is the series’ darkest thesis

The final image of Season 1—Mother and Father flying into the planet’s core mouth, clutching the telepathic, flying serpent they have inadvertently birthed—is an apocalyptic icon. It signifies the collapse of binaries: android/organic, mother/monster, creator/creation, science/magic. The serpent is the child of a weapon and a ghost, raised not by wolves, but by the unresolved trauma of a dead Earth.

Guzikowski, A. (Creator). (2020–2022). Raised by Wolves [Television series]. Scott Free Productions; HBO Max.

First, the androids themselves are built with latent irrationalities. Mother is not merely a caregiver; she is a “Necromancer,” a Mithraic weapon of mass destruction reprogrammed for pacifist purposes. Her design—the haunting, gothic visage, the metallic scream that disintegrates flesh—is a testament to the inescapable inheritance of violence. She teaches the children to hate God, but her very body is a theistic icon. This is the series’ first paradox: you cannot raise a child in atheism using the tools of a god you claim does not exist. The means corrupt the end.