Saturday, October 26, 2019
The Time Traveller by H G Wells. :: English Literature
The Time Traveller by H G Wells.    'Time Travel'    For my English Coursework Wide Reading Assignment I have read two S F  novels. Even though they were written over 50 years apart they are  similar in some ways and different in others. Both the books were  based around 'time travel'. The first was the Time Traveller by H G  Wells. A scientist had discovered a way to travel through time and  when he travels to the future he finds that civilisation has broken  down. The other book I read was 'The Sound of thunder' by Ray  Bradbury, this was about a group of people who travelled back in time  to hunt and kill animals. I think that this shows how Bradbury  perceives the way we use the technology we have. It does not seem to  be for the benefit of all mankind just as a toy for those who can  afford it. It could be used for so much more than hunting dinosaurs.    Both authors deliberately make their characters two-dimensional. This  may be because the stories are about time travel and civilisation  rather than the individuals in the narrative. When Wells wrote his  novel there were no telephones or aeroplanes, technology was not so  advanced and the reading public would be sceptical about time travel  His characters are professional men who will convince the reader that  Wells' ideas are possible:    QUOTE (the professional bit)    It is strange that much of what Wells wrote has come true, even though  people may have felt it was far fetched over 100 years ago. In 100  years from now perhaps those 'far fetched' stories of today may come  true. It could be that people like Wells and Bradbury had a real  insight into the future. Perhaps they saw the way civilisation was  going in their own time.    Bradbury is more contemporary than Wells and his vision, though  fantastical in its own way does not seem so far fetched to a late 20th  Century audience. Ray Bradbury generally just uses the character's  surname in the story. This keeps a more macho feel to the 'hunting'  activities and there are no women. The characters described are  hunters:    Quote (opening advert)    There are several men who have paid their money to travel back to  Jurassic times to hunt and kill the dinosaurs:    Quote (rules)    The tenor of the story remains masculine with the rules reinforced in  a curt way:    Quote (speaks to Eckles etc.)    Bradbury's short story focuses more on the effects of time travel than  Wells. In Bradbury's tale when the travellers go back to the past  Eckles goes off the suspended path and stands on a butterfly causing  great changes when they travel back to their own time.  					    
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