01 Aug 2009

Essays on The Time Machine

Few 19th century authors could match the popularity of H. G. Wells and his fantastic stories of adventure.  The Time Machine is one such story that captured the imaginations of the people, being cited as a major influence by dozens of modern scientists when asked what prompted the love of their chosen field of research.  Over the years the story has been translated into movie format on at least three occasions and has sparked no less than 15 published “sequels” by other authors.

In The Time Machine, The Traveler invents a machine that allows him to move through time.  Wells chronicles his travels deep into his future where he discovers many frightening and incredible sights.  He spends the lion’s share of his time in the distant future where he discovers a race of people called the Eloi.  After saving her from drowning, The Traveler begins a casual friendship with a young woman of that race named Weena.  The Eloi are similar the lotus eaters from Homer’s Odyssey.

The Traveler finds that the Eloi are not the only race of people in this wondrous distant land.  Living beneath the earth is a beast-like race of warriors called the Morloks.  When The Traveler returns to his machine he finds it has been dragged into the base of one of the statues that the Morlok use as entrances to the surface world.  His desperate, fear-filled foray into the underground in an attempt to retrieve his machine reveals the true nature of the Morlok’s relationship with the Eloi.  The Eloi are cattle for the Morlok.  They are kept well fed with fresh fruit and when the night falls they are harvested for their meat.

In the end the Morloks set a trap for the Traveler, they open the base of the statue where the machine is hidden and wait in ambush.  The Traveler escapes only by throwing the lever on his machine, sending him hurtling through time.  Travelling to other points even further into the future, he makes speculations on what The Traveler might find as the Earth and it’s solar system slowing dies over time.  He eventually returns home to convey his story to a close circle of friends but soon returns to his travels through time and is never seen again.

Most time travel novels deal with people travelling into the past.  Wells was more interested in the future.  Essays on why he might have been and how this affected his novel could prove interesting and effect speculative analysis papers.
In the 1960 movie adaptation, the friends noting the traveler’s disappearance also note that a single book is missing from his library.  An essay could be written on this by reflecting on what single book or type of book the student might take with them in the traveler’s situation.

Well written speculative fiction, such as The Time Machine, offer many opportunities for analysis, from character development to the descriptive quality of the narration.  The problem is, many students simply do not have the time.  That is where our company comes in.  We provide broad spectrum writing and research services designed to help students of all levels achieve their academic goals.  Students need but place an order through our secure ordering system to get started.  And if you need to correspond with the writer for whatever reason, our system allows this as well.  And rest assured, if there is ever a problem, our writers stand behind their work.  We do not charge for revisions and never will.

12 Nov 2008

Essays on The New World Order

In the era of the 1930s to 1950s, there were many writers who sought to explore what course the future might take. Among these writers were names widely recognized today as literary greats such as H. G. Wells, author of The Time Machine. Another work of Wells that explored the future was his non-fiction work, “The New World Order.”

The New World Order was written at the midpoint between Brave New World and Nineteen Eighty-Four and, when used as comparison to The New World Order, causes The New World Order to stand in stark contrast. H. G. Wells was a firm believer in the idea of a one-world government and in The New World Order, Wells argued his view that only a one world government that could ensure peace and harmony worldwide.

Through the twelve chapters of The New World Order, Wells presents his case for a one world government. In the course of The New World Order, Wells covers topics from a scathing review of racial and international conflict occurring in 1940 to potential methods to prevent abuses by a hypothetical global government.

Wells’ optimism over the potential of a one-world government in The New World Order contrasts sharply with the darker predictions of George Orwell and Aldous Huxley. Orwell and Huxley were fearful of the one-world government concept, seeing dangerous potential for abuses by such a government, thus their novels presented the potential threat of a one-world government.

  • Prepare a comparative essay using The New World Order, Brave New World, and Nineteen Eighty-Four. How do these sources compare and contrast?
  • Could a theoretical one-world government become oppressive and if so, how? What could the consequences be?

Over the decades since The New World Order, Brave New World, and Nineteen Eighty-Four, we have seen the closing of many societies (one going from a free “open” society to one of oppressive controlling structure) and the subsequent problems and suffering of those under the authority of those governments.

Evaluating the progress of such developments can take intensive research, since many pursuing such activities naturally try to hide their activities. Our writers are experts at research and preparation of reports on information discovered. These skills are often beyond the abilities of common students. Fortunately, students can easily place orders for assistance from our writers through our easy to use interface, safe in the knowledge that their identities and use of our services will be kept confidential.

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