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Time travel is a common theme in fiction and has been depicted in a variety of media such as literature, television and advertisements.[1]
In fiction featuring time travel, time travel is either the central theme of the story or is merely the means to set the story in motion.
H. G. Wells' story The Time Machine, written in 1895, was instrumental in moving the concept of time travel to the forefront of the public imagination.[2][3] Non-technological forms of time travel appeared in a number of earlier stories, and some earlier works featured elements suggestive of time travel, but remained somewhat ambiguous. Modern time travel stories examine the effects of temporal paradoxes, such as the grandfather paradox, and how travelling into the past can affect the future by accidently or intentionally changing history, creating an alternate history and/or parallel universe as a result.[2][3][4]
Sean Redmond regards time travel as providing a "necessary distancing effect" that allows science fiction to address contemporary issues in metaphorical ways.[5]
A number of themes can be seen to recur in time travel stories.
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