A common theme in science fiction literature is the usage of
futuristic devices to comment on today’s problems. Things such as class
division, direction of the human race, all authors of science fiction have
something to say about it, such as H.G. Wells with his novel, The Time
Machine. In the novel, the Time Traveler (as he is called, never referred
to by name) goes into what he thinks will be the peak of human society, only to
find, what else, class division between the Eloi, the simplistic small beings
who live on the surface of the Earth, and the Morlocks, who live underground
and are extremely threatening. Both of these species evolved out of human
beings, and suffice to say it seems Wells thinks that maybe farther into the future
humans will hit a peak, and maybe revert. I, for one, can see this. A future in
which human beings get lazy and eventually just give up is unfortunately a
plausible site today. For ever overachiever there’s just another trying to get
by and do nothing with their lives, and I believe we should fight this. In Wells’
novel, the Morlocks even succumb to cannibalism by preying on the small,
defenseless Eloi at night. An interesting point in the novel, that even the
Time Traveler mentions, is that he does not know much about the Morlocks, and
since they are the ones underground the “gradual widening of the present merely
temporary and social difference between the capitalist and the labourer, was
the key to the whole position.” (Wells, 41) He’s saying how even for all the
efforts to peak in human capacity, we can still revert back to “someone always
being better than the other”. There’s no compromise and it is bound to happen.
Why, though? Why should humans go back and revert, which brings me to my point
of people needing to live up to their potential. Human beings have an infinite
amount of time to improve and grow upon the things that we learn. For humanity
to devolve is the biggest insult we could give to society and life in general.
This is why the beginning of the novel, which focuses on the narrator going to
The Time Traveler’s house with a bunch of other colleagues to talk with the Time
Traveler and his Time Machine, is important, because it shows how people view
those who are eccentric. This got me thinking that just maybe we should embrace
eccentricity a little more, because it can give us a path to follow that we may
not have before, and it will help progress humanity and live up to our
potential that we not just deserve, but it is our responsibility.
I like how you apply the ideas in the text to our current culture. Do you think this could be the same message Wells wanted to express to his own time period?
ReplyDeleteI do think Wells wanted to express this to his own time period, because he portrays the Time Traveller as a hard working, wealthy Victorian man, maybe saying everybody needs to keep moving forward, be it the poor or the wealthy.
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