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・ The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (stage play)
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・ The Man Who Smiles
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・ The Man Who
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The Man Who Awoke
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・ The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo (film)
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・ The Man Who Came to Dinner
・ The Man Who Came to Dinner (film)


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The Man Who Awoke : ウィキペディア英語版
The Man Who Awoke

''The Man Who Awoke'' is a science fiction novel by Laurence Manning. It was initially serialised in five parts during 1933 in ''Wonder Stories'' magazine. Later it was published as one complete novel in 1975 by Del Rey/Ballantine.
Norman Winters puts himself into suspended animation for 5,000 years at a time. The stories detail his ensuing adventures as he tries to make sense of the societies he encounters each time he wakes.
==Plot summary==

Part 1 of the series describes Norman Winters’ previous life and his process of time travel.
After the disappearance of Norman Winters, his son, Vincent, questions the servants working on his New York estate. After receiving a suspicious answer from the groundskeeper Carstairs, one of his father’s most loyal workers, Vincent threatens to turn him in to the police. Preserving his freedom, Carstairs presents Vincent with a letter from his father detailing his whereabouts.
In the letter, Norman explains his collaborations with various scientists to create a “ray screen,” a radiation emanating mechanism, and coma-inducing “drag.” Determining that radiation, described as “cosmic rays,” were the cause of biological decay and aging, Norman constructs an underground chamber with six-foot leaden walls impervious to the outside radiation’s influence on his cells. Once in the chamber, Norman will use the sleep-drug to fall into a coma where he “shall not awake until (is ) again subjected to radiation,” which will be provided by the “ray screen” set to power on after three thousand years (180). In hopes of awaking to a Utopian future, Norman encourages Vincent to live his life in the absence of his father.
Upon waking up, Norman discovers that the ray-screen timer had malfunctioned and he had lain dormant for five thousand years. Realizing the success of his time travelling system, Norman explores the futuristic world only to return to his chamber to repeat the process.
* 5000 AD. Humanity staggers to save itself amid the world's littered, stagnant wreckage after what has become known as the great ''Age of Waste''.
* 10,000 AD. The world is dominated by ''the Brain'' - the immovable in purpose super computer that knows all, sees all, and feels nothing. Thanks to its cradle-to-grave supervision, human life is easy and comfortable, but what will happen when The Brain realizes people are superfluous?
* 15,000 AD. People can now program their choice of dreams and sleep their lives away. Winters awakes to find the sleeping outnumber the living. He cannot stop the implosion of civilization by himself.
* 20,000 AD. After an abused Age of Freedom came an Age of License. Genetic experiment heralded the terrifying ''Age of Anarchy''. Each Individual had his own mobile "City" that provided for all his needs, resulting in a society where people had no need for each other and were incapable of cooperating, resulting in nearly all interpersonal encounters being small wars.
* 25,000 AD. Scientists discover the secret sought through the centuries – immortality. But is Mankind ready for it? Immortality is frightfully boring without a purpose. Humanity scatters to the far corners of the cosmos seeking knowledge and experience, leading to a quest toward "the meaning of it all."
The novel might be easily dismissed as standard pulp fare if it had not presaged concepts popularized decades later: the sexual revolution, green consumerism, strong AI, full-immersion virtual reality as a surgical procedure (like The Matrix), desktop molecular manufacturing, global warming, and stem cell therapies. Many of these have only appeared in most peoples' worldview in the 21st century. This book was recently re-released.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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