…when H. G. Wells serialized The Chronic Argonauts in 1888, were there any prior or contemporanous fictions concerning time travel by other European or American authors?
What were, say, the earliest short stories or novels regarding time travel besides Wells’ The Time Machine?
Popular Science’s article 269 Years of Time Travel mentions a 1733 novel by Samuel Madden, “part of time-travel fiction trend originating in utopian literature.” The article fails to mention any other titles associated with that “time-travel fiction trend,” but if they exist, I’m sure some doper will be along to mention them.
I read the SDMB on my GNU (Unix-like) system (running on 120V, 60Hz AC current), caching images in GIF format that are downloaded over the TCP/IP protocol, while programs in a GUI interface nearly max out my 256MB of RAM memory.
How about we start another thread for this nonsense?
Edward Page Mitchell’s “The Clock that ran Backwards” appeared in the New York Sun Sept. 18, 1881, well before Wells. Mitchell also seems to have invented the Teleportation story (see me Teemings article: http://www.teemings.com/issue14/calmeacham.html
CalMeacham. I forgot about ‘A Christmas Carol’ (1843).
Would I be right in assuming that the means for time travel in “Anno 7603” and “Missing One’s Coach”, was a mystical force or supernatural intervention rather than an actual conveyance?
What exactly happens in Edward Page Mitchell’s “The Clock That Went Backwards?”
I think he was pointing out the redundancy of Science Fiction Fiction using Automatic Teller Machine Macines and Personal Identification Number Numbers.
The people in Anno 7603 go forward in time because of a fairy. The hero of “Missing One’s Coach” goes through some temporal shift, but the mechanism isn’t specified (and it’s not intentional on his part)
In “The Clock that Went Backward”, these boys find a broken pocketwatch that, when wound backward, transports them to Rennaisance Holand.
First, all those who think they are being clever by pointing out the supposed redundancy of ATM Machines and the like are not so much clever as completely wrong. Duplicating the end word is the proper way of referring to these initialisms. For example, OPEC Countries is correct; OPEC Nations is wrong.
Sci-fi fiction would be technically correct, if extremely awkward.
So when talking about time travel you can slice your argument in travel into the future or into the past, using machines or magic or no explanation at all, seeing into the past or future without traveling there, and on and on and on to the limits of human imagination (and endurance if you want to plow through every one of his examples).
What came before Wells depends greatly on which definition of time travel you care to discuss, so there can be no definitive answer to this question.