The Invisible Man stands out as possessing one of the most complicated heroes, or perhaps anti-heroes, inliterature. Griffin is not a naive dreamer such as Moreau's Pendick or a hapless victim of circumstanceslike the unnamed narrator of The War of the Worlds. He is a man of great genius and great faults. Perhapsclosest in character to the time traveler, the invisible man wants to the change the world through hisinvention. Griffin's genius, however, is selfish-no one profits from his experiments, not even himself. Athoroughly unlikeable character defined by impulsiveness, arrogance, rudeness, and, at times, violence,Griffin is a man of the late-nineteenth century-he is a man of the future. The Invisible Man is not only acommentary on the great spirit of invention that elevated the nineteenth century but also a warning againstthe eugenic and self-interested policies that almost destroyed the twentieth century.
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Appendix A: The Four Endings of The Invisible Mana) Pearson's Weekly, August 1897b) Pearson, First Edition, September 1897c) Pearson, Second Edition, November 1897d) Arnold, New York Edition, November 1897Appendix B: Invisibility in Nineteenth-Century Fictiona) James Dalton. From The Invisible Gentleman. London: Edward Bull, 1833. I: 61-72.b) Fitz-James O'Brien. From "What Was It? A Mystery" Harper's Magazine (March 1859): 504-9.c) W. S. Gilbert, "The Perils of Invisibility" (1869). More "Bab" Ballads: Much Sound and Little Sense. London: Routledge, 1872. 178-183.d) Edward Page Mitchell. From "The Crystal Man" The Sun (30 January 1881)e) Charles H. Hinton. From "Stella." Stella and An Unfinished Communication: Studies of the Unseen. London: Swan Sonnenschein & Co, 1895. 55-56.f) Katherine Kip. From "My Invisible Friend" The Black Cat (February 1897): 9-21.Appendix C: Reviews of The Invisible Mana) From "Mr. Wells's New Stories." Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science, and Art (18 September 1897), lxxxiv. 322.b) Arnold Bennett. "The Invisible Man." [Woman 405 (29 September 1897): 9] Arnold Bennett and H.G. Wells: A Record of a Personal and Literary Friendship. Ed. Harris Wilson. Urbana: U of Illinois P, 1960. 258-59.c) Letter from H.G. Wells replying to Arnold Bennett (October 1897)d) Clement Shorter. From "The Invisible Man." The Bookman [London] (October 1897): 19-20.e) Claudius Clear. From "The Fantastic Fiction; Or, `The Invisible Man.'" The Bookman [New York] 6 (November 1897): 250-51.f) "H.G. Wells's `The Invisible Man.'" The New York Times (25 December 1897): BR15.Appendix D: Wells and Friends on The Invisible Mana) Extract from Letter, H.G. Wells to James B. Pinker (Received 16 April 1896).b) Extract from Letter, H.G. Wells to James B. Pinker (Undated).c) H.G. Wells to James B. Pinker (2 May 1897).d) Joseph Conrad to H.G. Wells (4 December 1898). From Joseph Conrad: Life and Letters. Ed. G. Jean-Aubry. New York: Doubleday, 1927. 259-60.Appendix E: Biological Contexta) J. Lockhart Gerson, from "On the `Invisible Blood Corpuscles' of Norris." Journal of Anatomy and Physiology: Normal and Pathological. Macmillan and Co.: London and Cambridge, 1882.b) From W. Robinson, "Notes on Some Albino Birds Presented to the U.S. National Museum, with Some Remarks on Albinism." Proceedings of The United States National Museum, volume 11, issue 733, 1889.c) From H.G. Wells, "Popular Feeling and the Advancement of Science. Anti-Vivisection." The Way the World is Going: Guesses and Forecasts of the Years Ahead. London: Ernest Benn, 1928. 222-227.Appendix F: Technology Contexts: Roentgen Rays and Radio Wavesa) Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen. From "On a New Kind of Rays" Trans. Arthur Stanton. Nature 53 (23 January 1896): 274-276.b) H.J.W. Dam. From "A Wizard of To-Day." Pearson's Magazine. 1 (April 1896): 413-19.c) George Griffith, "A Photograph of the Invisible" Pearson's Magazine 1 (April 1896) 378-80.d) H.J.W. Dam "The New Telegraphy" The Strand Magazine 13 (March 1897): 273-80.Appendix G: Wells on Class and Societya) H.G. Wells. From Anticipations of the Reaction of Mechanical and Scientific Progress Upon Human Life and Thought. United Kingdom; Chapman and Hall, 1901: 229-30.b) H.G. Wells. From A Modern Utopia. London: Chapman and Hall, 1905. 265-70.c) H.G. Wells. From "Of the New Reign." An Englishman Looks at the World: Being a Series of Unrestrained Remarks upon Contemporary Matters. London: Cassel & Co, 1914. 28-32.d) H.G. Wells. From Experiment in Autobiography: Discoveries and Conclusions of A Very Ordinary Brain (since 1866). Philadelphia and New York: J.B. Lippincott, 1934: 556.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781554812738
Publisert
2018-09-30
Utgiver
Vendor
Broadview Press Ltd
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
140 mm
Aldersnivå
06, P
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
250

Forfatter

Biographical note

Nicole Lobdell is a Visiting Assistant Professor of English at DePauw University.

Nancee Reeves is a Lecturer in the Department of English at the University of Georgia.