Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > The Time Machine, H. G. Wells - Alex Eisenstein (essay date 1972)
The Time Machine, H. G. Wells - Alex Eisenstein (essay date 1972)
Alex Eisenstein (essay date 1972)
SOURCE: Eisenstein, Alex. “Very Early Wells: Origins of Some Major Physical Motifs in The Time Machine and The War of the Worlds.” Extrapolation 13 (1972): 119-26.
[In the following essay, Eisenstein traces Wells's formulation of the Morlocks and their underground environs in The Time Machine to his childhood home, Atlas House.]
In The Early H. G. Wells,1 Bernard Bergonzi treats the dualistic future world of The Time Machine mainly as an expression of the traditional mythic schism between Paradise and Perdition. To support his interpretation, he cites the contrasting imagery associated with the two distinct human habitats—and species—delineated in the story: descriptions of the upper realm and its people are predominately sunny and idyllic; those of the lower, somber and infernal.
Yet, beyond the demonic role he thus ascribes to the Morlocks,...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Bernard Bergonzi (essay date 1960)
- Robert M. Philmus (essay date May 1969)
- Jean-Pierre Vernier (essay date 1971)
- Alex Eisenstein (essay date 1972)
- William G. Niederland (essay date spring-summer 1976)
- Alex Eisenstein (essay date July 1976)
- Patrick Parrinder (essay date November 1976)
- David J. Lake (essay date March 1979)
- Mark M. Hennelly, Jr. (essay date summer 1979)
- Frank Scafella (essay date November 1981)
- John Huntington (essay date 1982)
- Robert J. Begiebing (essay date fall 1984)
- Veronica Hollinger (essay date July 1987)
- Kathryn Hume (essay date spring 1990)
- David C. Cody (essay date fall 1993)
- Bruce David Sommerville (essay date winter 1994)
- Patrick Parrinder (essay date 1995)
- John S. Parrington (essay date October 1997)
- Jan Hollin (essay date 1999)
- Martin T. Willis (essay date July 1999)
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