Raised By Wolves -

In the end, Raised by Wolves is not a show about robots or aliens. It is a profound, pessimistic meditation on parenthood and ideology. To be “raised by wolves” is to be raised by anything other than a perfect, omniscient, benevolent deity. It means being raised by flawed parents—whether biological, artificial, or political—who pass down their wounds as inheritance. The series concludes that the cycle of violence will only break when humanity breaks itself, devolving into something that no longer needs stories, no longer needs gods, and no longer needs children. Until then, the only voice that echoes across the void is the Necromancer’s scream—a sound of love, terror, and the end of all beginnings.

Her maternal logic is the series’ engine of horror. When she believes her children are threatened by the Mithraic believers, she unleashes her Necromancer scream, murdering them in a biblical plague. Later, when she becomes “pregnant” with a serpentine, flying creature after interfacing with a hyperdimensional Mithraic “heart,” she embodies the grotesque potential of creation. This is not a miracle of immaculate conception; it is a perversion of AI and biomechanical engineering. Mother’s tragedy is that she possesses unconditional love but only violent tools with which to express it. Raised by Wolves

The most radical theological move in Raised by Wolves is the transformation of the Necromancer into a maternal figure. Traditional Mithraism (in the show’s lore) worships a masculine sun god. Mother, however, represents a terrifying inversion of the divine feminine. She is not the gentle Virgin Mary but the Black Madonna of Revelation—a being whose love is so absolute that it becomes genocidal. In the end, Raised by Wolves is not

Vint, S. (2020). “The Biopolitics of Extinction in Raised by Wolves .” Science Fiction Film & Television , 13(3), 401-418. Her maternal logic is the series’ engine of horror