Numerous science fiction, utopian and dystopian novels revolve around sexual reproduction, pregnancy and infertility. Some examples:
- Brian Aldiss: Greybeard (universal infertility)
- Margaret Atwood: The Handmaid's Tale (1985) (widespread infertility in a theocratic United States)
- David Brin: Glory Season (1994) (mixutre of parthenogenesis an sexual reproduction in a mainly feamle society)
- Anthony Burgess: The Wanting Seed (1962)
- Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Herland (1915) (parthenogenesis in an all-female society)
- Aldous Huxley: Brave New World (1932) (all children produced in artificial wombs and engineered for specific social niches)
- P.D. James: The Children of Men (1992) (universal infertility)
- Marge Piercy: Woman on the Edge of Time (1976) (fetuses raised externally in breeders rather than in the female womb)
- John Wyndham: The Midwich Cuckoos (1957)