1 | [[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/9780552990967_uk.jpg]] |
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3 | ''The Shape of Things to Come'' is a 1933 SpeculativeFiction novel by Creator/HGWells, detailing mankind's struggles to survive and reach the future in the midst of global war and societal collapse. |
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5 | The original novel prognosticates UsefulNotes/WorldWarII (though in the book the war lasts for a decade or more), which ends inconclusively but leads to large-scale societal collapse -- not helped by [[ThePlague a horrific plague]] which nearly effaces the human populace (in the book the 'history writer' claims the world population was cut in half). |
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7 | Wells then envisions a benevolent OneWorldOrder which, using its monopoly on the world's surviving transportation infrastructure, begins to rebuild society into a scientific {{utopia}}. After a century, the OneWorldOrder is peacefully overthrown, after which the utopia is apparently achieved. |
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9 | The novel was [[FilmOfTheBook adapted to film]] as ''Film/ThingsToCome'' in 1936, and the title ([[InNameOnly and little else]]) was appropriated for another sci-fi film [[Film/TheShapeOfThingsToCome in 1979]]. The novel also provided the title for an episode of ''Series/{{Lost}}'' and the closing sequence of ''Series/{{Caprica}}'', amongst other {{Shout Out}}s in popular culture. |
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11 | !!This novel provides examples of: |
12 | * AddedAlliterativeAppeal: "Fighting Forties" (a decade of war), "Famished Fifties" (a decade of tortuously slow rebuilding amid privation and mass disease). |
13 | * AfterTheEnd: One of the earliest examples of the modern "humanity bombs itself back to feudal times" form of the trope |
14 | * ApocalypseAnarchy: Downplayed, but present in some areas |
15 | * AtomicHate: Popularized, and may have [[TropeNamer coined]], the term "Atomic Bomb", and predicted many of the forms the technology took, such as submarine-borne ballistic missiles. |
16 | * AuthorTract: The book is essentially a long, long fictional essay about why Wells' particular brand of socialism was the only way to a perfect society. |
17 | * BalkanizeMe: As an aftermath of the novel's version of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, the effectiveness of many countries' governments to enforce their power faded in varying degrees, rendering many regions de facto autonomous. |
18 | * BlackShirt: Actual UsefulNotes/FascistItaly Black Shirts are still operating some time after the second Conference at Basra in 1978. |
19 | * DirectLineToTheAuthor: The book is presented as being a transcription of a book seen in the dreams of a Dr. Philip Raven, who had passed his papers on to Wells before his death in 1930. |
20 | * DividedStatesOfAmerica: For example Utah, where Mormonism was then declared the state religion. |
21 | * FailedFutureForecast: The book (more or less accurately) prognosticates the start of World War II. Then subverted when the book's WWII goes on for over a decade and completely obliterates all of human society. |
22 | * JustBeforeTheEnd: Where the story begins. |
23 | * LensmanArmsRace: One of Well's favorite tropes to begin with, this time taken to its grim LogicalExtreme. |
24 | * MonumentalDamage: After UsefulNotes/WorldWarII all over the place of course. The inconclusive ten-year war ends with a fizzle, and the extensive gas and biological-chemical warfare predicted by Wells during the 1940s creates favorable conditions for mass epidemics throughout the 1950s, along with [[CrapsackWorld the loss of reliable electricity, food and clothing]]. |
25 | * MutuallyAssuredDestruction: An influential early portrayal of the trope, and what could happen if the standoff were to break. |
26 | * NextSundayAD: Part one sets up the state of the world in 1933 (the year it was published) and projects from there. |
27 | * NoBikesInTheApocalypse: Averted in chapter 11 ''Europe in 1960'' wherein the ''Diary of Titus Cobbett'' is mentioned, written during Cobbett's bicycle ride through the [[AfterTheEnd completely devastated Europe]] of [[{{Zeerust}} 1958]]. |
28 | * OutgrownSuchSillySuperstitions: The world government suppresses organised religion with remarkable ease. |
29 | * ThePlague: Humanity may have done a pretty good job of screwing itself over, but it was the epidemics in the aftermath that nearly finished the job. |
30 | * TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture: Where the book quickly moves on to from NextSundayAD. |
31 | * UtopiaJustifiesTheMeans: Wings Over The World. |
32 | * WeaponOfMassDestruction: The story is in part the result of Wells reading up on the latest developments in atomic theory, and having a horrifying realization about what it made possible. |
33 | * WorldWarIII: As envisioned by someone who had not yet seen World War II. |
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