The end of the 19th century was a period of contradiction between intellectual optimism regarding the teleological progress of history and a social reality of inequality and urban misery. The writer H.G. Wells positioned himself between the two sides, being a biologist and an activist concerned with the immense difficulties faced by the working class. In his book The Time Machine (1895), these concerns are evident when the protagonist meets the society of the future: a dystopia where the evolution of the human species, left to its own devices, leads to the radicalization of inequality in two different species: the eloi and the morlocks. Conversing with utopian literature, the book serves as a vehicle for the author to criticize his historic...