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wellsian การใช้

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  • Brought to its senses, humanity creates a utopian order along Wellsian lines in short order.
  • All members receive a triannual newsletter and an annual journal, entitled " The Wellsian ".
  • Woking has a Wellsian Martian Tripod, designed by Michael Condron, which was unveiled in April 1998.
  • Few took the novel seriously as a work of art, seeing it instead as an exposition of " Wellsian philosophy ."
  • What they didn't count on was for Curtice to pack on so many pounds, his body becoming Wellsian, too.
  • Two notable exclusions from Soviet'Wellsian'tradition were Yevgeny Zamyatin, author of dystopian novel " Ivan Vasilyevich " ( 1936 ).
  • That is because he helped create the wildly popular ANSKY campaign for Adidas, in which five die-hard Yankee fans display their loyalties on their bare, Wellsian midsections.
  • Due to his depiction of a Wellsian future as a murderous global police state, Benson's novel has been called one of the first modern works of dystopian science fiction.
  • In his 1955 comic novel " Martians, Go Home ", Fredric Brown spoofs the Wellsian invasion, and reinterprets the Martian invader as a rude house guest with ulterior motives.
  • At 38, Rockman is part of a generation of painters who share an H . G . Wellsian sensibility that the world of living things, despite its superficial charms, has become a dangerous place.
  • And the 1964 version of " First Men In the Moon, " with top-notch effects by Ray Harryhausen, maintains the Wellsian message of human hubris, as visitors from Earth manage to destroy a sophisticated lunar society.
  • However, despite the popularity and notoriety of his ideas, Wells failed to exert a deeper and more lasting influence because he was unable to concentrate his energies on a direct appeal to intelligentsias who would, ultimately, have to coordinate the Wellsian new world order.
  • Despite the popularity of his ideas in some state-socialist circles, Wells failed to exert a deeper and more lasting influence because he was unable to concentrate his energies on a direct appeal to the intelligentsias who would ultimately have to coordinate a Wellsian new world order.
  • "' Gustave Henri Joseph Le Rouge "'( 22 July 1867-24 February 1938 ) was a French writer who embodied the evolution of modern science fiction at the beginning of the 20th century, by moving it away from the Wellsian science fiction.
  • "The way it strikes me is that Verne was much more explicit in what he was describing, and that works against him today, " said John Partington, editor of The Wellsian, an annual scholarly journal published by Britain's H . G . Wells Society.
  • ""'The Bulpington of Blup " "', a 1932 novel by H . G . Wells, is a character study analyzing the psychological sources of resistance to Wellsian ideology, and was influenced by Wells's acquaintance with Carl Gustav Jung and his ideas.
  • A . M . Dellamonica has described it as " especially great "; however, " The Wellsian " ( the official journal of the H . G . Wells Society ) considers it to be " gibberish " which " wastes the reader's time . " " Selects " was omitted from the 2015 German translation of " Best of Connie Willis ", because " the publisher felt that the humor didn't translate well ".
  • She enlists the aid of the devoted Mr . Brumley, and his inquries result in certain Wellsian convictions that she embraces : " the forces of social organization have been coming into play now, more and more for a century and a half, to produce new wholesale ways of doing things, new great organizations, organizations that invade the autonomous family more and more, and are perhaps destined ultimately to destroy it altogether and supersede it . " Lady Harman comes to see her work with the hostels in this context and as her " raison d'阾re ".