Index to Articles in The Wellsian,
New Series Vols. 1-21 (1976-1998)
No.1, 1976 (Editor, J.P. Vernier):
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J.R. Hammond, ‘The Scenic Background of Tono-Bungay', pp.3-5
-
J.P. Vernier, ‘Remington as Time Traveller: Wells's treatment of time in
The New Machiavelli', pp.6-10
-
Patrick Parrinder, ‘H.G. Wells and Beatrice Webb: reflection on a quarrel',
pp.11-17
-
Darko Suvin, ‘The Time Machine as a structural model for science
fiction', pp.18-33
No.2, Summer 1978 (Editor, J.P. Vernier):
-
E.D. Mackerness, ‘Nathan Benjulia, a Prototype of Dr. Moreau?', pp.1-5
-
R. Brown, ‘Mr. Blettsworthy on Rampole Island: "The Story of a Gentleman
of Culture and Refinement"', pp.6-21 & 5
-
M. Draper, ‘News from Somewhere: Competing Viewpoints in The Wheels
of Chance', pp.22-30 & 5
No.3, Spring 1980 (Editor, J.P. Vernier):
-
R. Hampson, ‘H.G. Wells and the Staffordshire Potteries', pp.1-5
-
David J. Lake, ‘The Drafts of The Time Machine, 1894', pp.6-13
-
Christopher Priest, ‘Wells's Novels: Imagination or Thought?', pp.14-24
-
J.P. Vernier, ‘H.G. Wells, Writer or Thinker? From Science Fiction to Social
Prophecy', pp.24-35
No.4, Summer 1981 (Editor, Patrick Parrinder):
-
J.R. Hammond, ‘H.G. Wells as Educationalist', pp.1-7
-
Michael Draper, ‘Wells, Plato, and the Ideal State', pp.8-14
-
Patrick Parrinder, ‘The Time Machine: H.G. Wells's Journey through
Death', pp.15-23
-
Christopher Rolfe, ‘"A Blaze and New Beginnings": The Ironic Use of Myth
in The History of Mr Polly', pp.24-35
-
Bernard Bergonzi, ‘H.G. Wells and Henry James: An Unnoticed Item', pp.36-38
No.5, Summer 1982 (Editor, Patrick Parrinder):
-
W.M.S. Russell, ‘Folk-Tales and H.G. Wells', pp.2-18
-
J. Kagarlitski, ‘Wells's Short Stories', pp.19-23
-
Leon Stover, ‘Spade House Dialectic: Theme and Theory in Things to Come',
pp.23-32
-
Christopher Rolfe, ‘From Puttenhanger to Polly: A Note on H.G. Wells's
Comic Masterpiece', pp.33-35
-
Michael Draper, ‘The Martians in Ecuador', pp.35-36
No.6, Summer 1983 (Editor, Patrick Parrinder):
-
R.T. Stearn, ‘Wells and War: H.G. Wells's writings on military subjects,
before the Great War', pp.1-15
-
Stephen Ingle, ‘Shaw, Wells and the Fabian Utopia', pp.16-29
-
R.G. Hampson, ‘H.G. Wells and The Arabian Nights', pp.30-34
No.7, Summer 1984 (Editor, Patrick Parrinder):
-
Lyman Tower Sargent, ‘The Pessimistic Eutopias of H.G. Wells', pp.2-18
-
Kirpal Singh, ‘Science and Society: A Brief Look at The Invisible Man',
pp.19-23
-
Lucy Sussex, ‘The Aeronautical Revisions of H.G. Wells's The Sleeper
Narratives', pp.24-31
-
Bernard Loing, ‘H.G. Wells at Grasse (1924-1933)', pp.32-37
-
Robert Crossley, ‘Wells to Stapledon: A New Letter', pp.38-39
No.8, Summer 1985 (Editor, Michael Draper):
-
Brian Aldiss, ‘In the Days of the Comet: An Introduction', pp.1-6
-
Lord Stewart of Fulham, ‘Human Rights', pp.7-9
-
R.T. Stearn, ‘The Temper of an Age: H.G. Wells' message on war, 1914 to
1936', pp.9-27
-
C.E.C. Greely, 'The War of the Worlds in the Classroom', pp.27-28
-
M.S. Ray, ‘Wells, Ford and Tono-Bungay', pp.28-30
-
Bernard Loing, ‘H.G. Wells at Work (1894-1900): A Writer's Beginnings',
pp.30-37
No.9, Summer 1986 (Editor, Michael Draper):
-
J.R. Hammond, ‘H.G. Wells: Novelist in the Making', pp.2-5
-
Patrick Parrinder, ‘Wells and the Literature of Prophecy', pp.6-11
-
Michael Draper, ‘Wells, Blake and the Prophetic Vision', pp.12-17
-
Rose Tilly, ‘The Search for Wells's Ropeways', pp.18-22
-
Bernard Loing, ‘H.G. Wells at Work (1894-1900): Love and Mr Lewisham',
pp.23-26
No.10, Summer 1987 (Editor, Michael Draper):
-
John Allett, ‘Tono-Bungay: The Metaphor of Disease', pp.2-10
-
Cliona Murphy, ‘H.G. Wells and Votes for Women', pp.11-19
-
Lyman Tower Sargent, ‘The Dream Mislaid: The Political Theory of H.G. Wells',
pp.20-31
-
Hugh J. Schonfield, ‘Wells Made Me a World Citizen', pp.32-38
-
Patrick Parrinder, ‘"H.G. Wells" Gives a Speech to the British Science
Fiction Convention', pp.39-42
-
W. Warren Wagar, ‘The International Wells Symposium', pp.43-47
No.11, Summer 1988 (Editor, Michael Draper):
-
David Lake, ‘The Current Texts of Wells's Early SF Novels: Situation Unsatisfactory
(Part 1)', pp.3-12
-
R.D. Haynes, ‘The Unholy Alliance of Science in The Island of Doctor
Moreau', pp.13-24
-
John Huntington, ‘Wells and Social Class', pp.25-32
-
James Dilloway, ‘The World of H.G. Wells: A Tale of Stimulus and Response',
pp.33-47
No.12, Summer 1989 (Editor, Michael Draper):
-
Leon Stover, ‘H.G. Wells and The Sea Lady: A Platonic Affair in
the "Great Outside"?', pp.2-16
-
J.R. Hammond, ‘The Narrative Voice in Tono-Bungay', pp.16-21
-
David Lake, ‘The Current Texts of Wells's Early SF Novels: Situation Unsatisfactory
(Part 2)', pp.21-36
-
Patrick Parrinder, ‘A List of Contemporary Reviews and Articles on Wells',
pp.37-43
-
I.S. Low, ‘Opinion: H.G. Wells and the Stock Exchange Crash of 1987', pp.43-45
-
Michael Draper, ‘Opinion: When the Historian Awakes', pp.46-48
No.13, Summer 1990 (Editor, Michael Draper):
-
David Lake, ‘Mr Bedford's Brush with God: Fantastic Tradition and Mysticism
in The First Men in the Moon', pp.2-17
-
Kenneth V. Bailey, ‘"There Would Presently Come Out of the Darkness": Wells's
"Filmic" Imagination', 18-35
-
John Allett, ‘The Durkheimian Theme of Suicide in Tono-Bungay',
pp.35-43
-
Kate Macdonald, ‘Wells's Correspondence with John Buchan', pp.43-48
No.14, Summer 1991 (Editor, Michael Draper):
-
Patrick Parrinder, ‘New Worlds for Old', pp.1-18
-
Iain Wakeford, ‘Wells, Woking and The War of the Worlds', pp.18-29
-
A. Langley Searles, ‘Concerning "The Country of the Blind"', pp.29-33
-
J.R. Hammond, ‘The Timescale of Tono-Bungay', pp.34-36
-
Juliusz K. Palczewski, ‘On the Contemporary Relevance of Wells's Conception
of History', pp.36-41
-
Brian Cheyette, ‘Beyond Rationality: H.G. Wells and the Jewish Question',
pp.41-64
No.15, Summer 1992 (Editor, Michael Draper):
-
David C. Smith, ‘Wells and Eastern Europe', pp.3-15
-
Mary Mayer, ‘Russia in the Shadows and Wells under a Cloud', pp.16-24
-
Leon Stover, ‘Wells's Communist Revision, Perestroika, and the New World
Order', pp.25-34
-
Juliusz K. Palczewski, ‘Wells: Champion Revisionist, Reformist and Perestroishchik',
pp.35-39
-
David Lake, ‘The Cromie-Wells Controversy, 1901-02', pp.40-46
No.16, Summer 1993 (Editor, Michael Draper):
-
Sylvia Hardy, ‘H.G. Wells the Poststructuralist', pp.2-23
-
Michael Draper, ‘Wells and the Curriculum', pp.24-29
-
J.R. Hammond, ‘The Island of Doctor Moreau: A Swiftian Parable',
pp.30-41
-
Chris E. Little, ‘A Note on the Early Editions of The Invisible Man',
pp.42-44
-
Tom Miller, ‘Correspondence', pp.45-46
No.17, Winter 1994 (Editor, Sylvia Hardy):
-
Tom Miller, ‘H.G. Wells and Aldous Huxley', pp.3-10
-
Bruce David Sommerville, ‘The Time Machine: A Chronological and
Scientific Revision', pp.11-29
-
David Lake, ‘The 1897 Editions of The Invisible Man', pp.30-31
-
Eric Cash, ‘Confessions of a Skirt-Chasing Feminist: Wells's Tono-Bungay
and the Idea of a New Woman', pp.32-45
No.18, Winter 1995 (Editor, Sylvia Hardy):
-
Kyle Patrick Hardin, ‘A Response to Tom Miller's "H.G. Wells and Aldous
Huxley"', pp.3-4
-
Alex Boulton, ‘The Myth of the New Found Land in H.G. Wells's "The Country
of the Blind"', pp.5-18
-
J.R. Hammond, ‘The Significance of Weena', pp.19-22
-
Gareth Davies-Morris, ‘Looking for Lou Pidou', pp.23-28
No.19, Winter 1996 (Editor, Sylvia Hardy):
-
Lyman T. Sargent, ‘The Time Machine in the Development of Wells's
Social and Political Thought', pp.3-11
-
John Partington, ‘The Time Machine: A Polemic on the Inevitability
of Working Class Liberation and a Plea for a Socialist Solution to Late-Victorian
Capitalist Exploitation', pp.12-21
-
Alan Mayne, ‘The Virtual Time Machine: Part I', pp.22-26
-
Tom Miller, ‘The War in the Air: A Study in Plotting', pp.27-29
-
Eric L. Fitch, ‘How Green was my Utopia?: A Reflection on William Morris's
News from Nowhere, H.G. Wells's Men Like Gods and Ernest
Callenbach's Ecotopia', pp.30-35
-
Cliona Murphy, ‘H.G. Wells: His History, the People and the Historians',
pp.36-47
No.20, Winter 1997 (Editor, Sylvia Hardy):
-
David C. Smith, ‘A Chat with the Author of The Time Machine', pp.3-9
-
Fernando Porta, ‘[The Time Machine: Past, Present and Future] One Text,
Many Utopias: Some examples of intertextuality in The Time Machine',
pp.10-20
-
Alan Mayne, ‘The Virtual Time Machine: Part II – Some Physicists' Views
of Time Travel', pp.20-31
-
John S. Partington, ‘An Identification of and Suggested Reasons for the
Differences between the 1905 H.G. Wells Novel, Kipps: the Story of a
Simple Soul, and the 1941 Carol Reed film, Kipps', pp.32-38
-
Patrick Parrinder, ‘The View from Bun Hill: H.G. Wells, Kent and the Male
Romance', pp.38-49
-
Sylvia Hardy, ‘A Feminist Perspective on H.G. Wells', pp.49-62
No.21, Winter 1998 (Editor, Sylvia Hardy):
-
Dana Cook, ‘Meeting H.G. Wells … a miscellany of first Encounters', pp.4-13
-
Catherine Stoye, ‘My Mother, Marjorie Craig Wells', pp.14-17
-
John Hammond, ‘Images of the Door in Tono-Bungay', pp.18-21
-
Tom Miller, ‘The War in the Air: A Study in Plotting', pp.22-24
-
John S. Partington, ‘A Comparison of the Representation of Arthur Conan
Doyle and H.G. Wells in The Strand Magazine, 1891-1901', pp.25-34
-
Laurence Price, ‘Messrs Wells and Conan Doyle – Purveyors of Horticultural
Curiosities and Proto-Triffids', pp.35-44
-
Katalin Csala, ‘Nationalism Versus Internationalism: H.G. Wells and Hungarian
Revision', pp.45-50
No.22, 1999 (Editor, John Partington)
-
David C. Smith, 'The H.G. Wells Society and its Raison d'être',
pp.3-10.
-
Laura Scuriatti, 'A Tale of Two Cities: H.G. Wells's The Door in the
Wall' Illustrated by Alvin Langdon Coburn', pp.11-28
-
John S. Partington, 'Thornwood Lodge, Knowl Hill, Berkshire: Home of Isabel
Mary Wells, c.1897-1899', pp.29-34
-
Jonathan Bignell, 'Another Time, Another Space: Modernity, Subjectivity,
and The Time Machine', pp.34-47
-
Jan Hollm, 'The Time Machine and the Ecotopian Tradition', pp.47-54.
-
François O. Beaulieu, 'The Copy Texts of American Revised Editions
of The Time Machine', pp.54-67
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