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  1. The Day of the Triffids touches on mankind's advances in science and technology as a possible contributor to the collapse of society that's depicted in the novel. I saw them now with a disgust that they had never roused in me before.

  2. They meet a group of survivors, led by Michael Beadley, that formed a society where mandatory procreation will be instituted to repopulate the world with sighted people. This causes Bill to question everything, but Josella feels it is the only way to ensure humanity’s survival.

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  4. "The Day of the Triffids" offers a sobering reflection on the vulnerabilities of modern society and the consequences of tampering with the natural order. It underscores the importance of human connection, resourcefulness, and adaptability in the face of adversity.

  5. The “Day of the Triffids ” is set in an indeterminate “present” as this work of fiction was written during the 1950’s. The hero of the story is a biologist named Bill Masen. He specializes in the study, care, and cultivation of the titular triffids.

  6. build back into it, as society recovers; many of them de-scribe the invasion of the "normal" from outside, not its hollowing out from within. Indeed, in its portrayal of ordinariness, and of the ordinary gradually going bad, The Day of the Triffids is almost unique in Wyndham's work. The process that is to inform The Day of the Triffids is there

  7. The Day of the Triffids is more about feelings, about emotions. The author describes in a very interesting way the changes, taking place in the world, the transformation of people into a herd of animals, blindly fighting for their existence. The whole novel is saturated with the spirit of death, pain and despair.

  8. Coker’s group kidnaps Masen and Playton. Each is put in charge of a group of blind people, assigned to an area of London, and instructed to keep everyone alive until help comes (from America, many...

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