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The first law of time travel: The Time Machine and thermodynamics.

Alder, Emily

Authors



Abstract

Critical analyses of H. G. Wells’s The Time Machine (1895) have attended closely to themes of biology, such as evolutionary degeneration, but those of physics have not been treated with comparable depth. While many accounts of The Time Machine do consider late-Victorian energy physics and readily identify a narrative of entropy with its origin in the second law of thermodynamics, they tend to overlook the full complexity of thermodynamics, which requires attention to the first law (the law of conservation) as well as to the second. This paper thus explores the significance of the first law of thermodynamics to The Time Machine and to the social project of Wells’s fiction, by examining how both laws work together both to produce the poetic power of the novel and to express Wells’s warning to his contemporaries. I suggest that the pessimism of The Time Machine is produced as a result of extrapolation not of the second law of thermodynamics, but of the first law. Although the apparently positive narrative of energy conservation was appropriated for Victorian progressionism and optimism about the future, this is precisely what Wells subverts in order to reinforce his social critique of the 1890s.

Citation

Alder, E. (2013, April). The first law of time travel: The Time Machine and thermodynamics. Paper presented at British Society for Literature and Science Annual Conference

Presentation Conference Type Conference Paper (unpublished)
Conference Name British Society for Literature and Science Annual Conference
Start Date Apr 1, 2013
End Date Apr 1, 2013
Publication Date 2013
Deposit Date May 28, 2013
Peer Reviewed Not Peer Reviewed
Keywords H.G.Wells; The Time Machine; thermodynamics; Victorian literature; law of conservation;
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/id/eprint/6066