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  2. Time travel in fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_travel_in_fiction

    A time slip is a plot device in fantasy and science fiction in which a person, or group of people, seem to travel through time by unknown means. [12] [13] The idea of a time slip has been used in 19th century fantasy, an early example being Washington Irving's 1819 Rip Van Winkle, where the mechanism of time travel is an extraordinarily long sleep. [14]

  3. Slipstream fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slipstream_genre

    As an emerging genre, slipstream has been described as nonrealistic fiction with a postmodern sensibility, exploring an awareness of societal and technological change and psychological breakdown previously shown by science fiction authors during the time of postmodernism, as well as poets and experimental authors in modernism. [11]

  4. Accidental travel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accidental_travel

    An accidental time travel classic. Accidental travel is a speculative fiction plot device in which ordinary people accidentally find themselves outside of their normal place or time, often for no apparent reason, a particular type of the “fish-out-of-water” plot.

  5. List of time travel works of fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_time_travel_works...

    Time travellers from the late twenty-first to the early twenty-second century go through a one-way time portal to the Earth's Pliocene. The world is controlled by humanoid extraterrestrials. 1982 Life, the Universe and Everything: Douglas Adams: Time travel paradoxes form the basis of this broad comedy, as in the case of the ancient poet ...

  6. Time travel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_travel

    The first page of The Time Machine published by Heinemann. Time travel is the hypothetical activity of traveling into the past or future. Time travel is a concept in philosophy and fiction, particularly science fiction. In fiction, time travel is typically achieved through the use of a device known as a time machine.

  7. It's Time to Rewrite the Rules of Historical Fiction - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/time-rewrite-rules...

    Research has long been a backbone of the genre. But beyond the textbooks, there's a whole world of family stories that have not yet become history. They deserve their place in fiction, too.

  8. Timestream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timestream

    Rick Sutcliffe provides a definition in a brief essay on his own fiction: "The timestream is an alternate history device used in Rick Sutcliffe's fiction. It is the medium in which the various alternate earths exist, or, if one prefers, it provides the connections among them, in the manner of C. S. Lewis' wood between the worlds-- a place between."

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