Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > The Time Machine, H. G. Wells - Robert J. Begiebing (essay date fall 1984)


The Time Machine, H. G. Wells - Robert J. Begiebing (essay date fall 1984)

Robert J. Begiebing (essay date fall 1984)

SOURCE: Begiebing, Robert J. “The Mythic Hero in H. G. Wells's The Time Machine.Essays in Literature 11, no. 2 (fall 1984): 201-10.

[In the following essay, Begiebing discusses the Time Traveller as the archetype of the mythic hero.]

In 1915 Van Wyck Brooks hinted at an important quality of H. G. Wells's vision when he said that the author's intelligence is “exuberant” with a “very genuine religious instinct” that Wells “lavished” upon “the social process itself.” And in 1922 and 1946 two foreign writers, Evgeny Zamyatin and Jorge Luis Borges, commented on Wells's timeless symbolic processes and mythmaking. But it was in the 1960's that critics began to focus on the archetypal dimensions of Wells's “scientific romances.” Bernard Bergonzi argued in 1960 and 1961 that Wells's early fantasies were closer to the fables of Hawthorne, Melville, and Kafka than to...

[The entire page is 5717 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: