Entry updated 18 November 2024. Tagged: Author.
(1842-1902) Spanish diplomat, playwright and author, initially of zarzuelas, comic operettas with spoken dialogue in the French manner. He is of sf interest for the book-length "El anacronópete" (inNovelas, coll1887; trans Yolanda Molina-Gavilán and Andrea Bell asThe Time Ship: A Chrononautical Journey2012) which, although it is not the first text to posit something likeTime Travel, seems to be the first to describe aTime Machine – an elaborate hermetically sealed ark whose ornate furnishings and ample passenger list are reminiscent of theNautilus in JulesVerne'sTwenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea (1871) – and to describe in detail aFantastic Voyage into the past. Romantic intrigues and farcical events govern theSatirical tone of the tale, which was originally written as a (never produced) zarzuela. In the protagonists's search for the secret ofImmortality, the time ark returns initially to the Battle of Tétouan in 1860, a Spanish victory in the war against Morocco, where in this case events are initially viewed backwards (seeTime in Reverse) as the machine does not come to rest. Later genuine stops include the China of 200 CE, where the European cast humiliatingly finds that EuropeanTechnology is treated as old hat; Pompeii; the time of the Flood (where the ark becomes an Ark); and finally the beginning of creation in the "primeval burning mass" of chaos. Just as all is lost, the tale turns out to be a dream: but neither this feeble recourse, nor the spoofish antics of the cast, fully undercut the novelty ofThe Time Ship. [JC]
born Madrid, Spain: 2 March 1842
died Oloron Sainte-Marie, France: 7 September 1902
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