Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

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    Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland holds a plethora of idea and theories that make up its fascinating story and complex themes. However, the theories and themes that stick out the most throughout the story are based upon an ideology of gender, class, and feminism. The story itself shows the experiences of a little girl in a world that very closely reflects the Victorian era from which she was accustomed. Overall, the novel breaks down the binary opposition of gender and the power dynamics between adults

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    feels. This representation of the anxious rabbit reflects Alice’s anxiety. Alice worries when she has to decide whether she will follow the instructions on the label that says, “Drink me” (Carroll 13). She is struggling with what she knows from her world as she remembers, “she had read several nice little stories about children who had got burnt, and eaten up by wild beasts” (Carroll 13) and “all because they would not remember the simple rules their friends had taught them” (Carroll 13). Alice is

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    In Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Alice changes size constantly. When she first arrives in Wonderland, she's too big to make it through the little door into the exquisite garden; after she drinks from the mysterious bottle, she's too small to reach the key. Once she eats the special cake, she's enormous, but the White Rabbit's fan makes her small again. In the rabbit's house, another bottle of mystery cordial makes her swell up and get stuck in the room; pebbles thrown in the window turn to cakes

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    Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll starts off in England around 1865. The novel continues to follow the main character Alice and her adventures to Wonderland. The tone in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland for the most part is very playful. The novel states,"Well!" thought Alice to herself, "After such a fall as this, I shall think nothing of tumbling down stairs! How brave they'll all think me at home! Why, I wouldn't say anything about it, even if I fell off the top of the house!"

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    her nonsensical underground adventure. Through her conversations with the strange creatures, and the queer situations that she faces, she hopelessly searches for order, rule, and reason. However, Alice fails and surrenders to the unexplainable actions of these creatures. Unlike Alice, readers who know about Lewis Carroll's life- the creator of this chaotic world- are able to explain, and understand a lot of the aspects that he included in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. In his essay, Richard Jenkyns

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    idealized notions of Victorian femininity. Two texts which critically engage with food and the agency of eating are Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Sarah Grand’s Babs the Impossible. Throughout Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, a particular emphasis is placed on the food Alice encounters while navigating her way through the curious fantasy world. While Alice’s enjoyment of food suggests she rejects the ideal woman’s modest appetite, the obedience she demonstrates while eating puts her

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    Probing Insanity in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland       Everybody dreams during his lifetime. It is a part of human nature that we experience almost everyday. Dreams can be lost memories, past events and even fantasies that we relive during our unconscious hours of the day. As we sleep at night, a new world shifts into focus that seems to erase the physical and moral reality of our own. It is an individual's free mind that is privately exposed, allowing a person to roam freely in his own

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    Lewis Carroll and Vladimir Nabokov both effectively present the idea of how a child can easily lose their innocence. Lewis Carroll’s, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland follows a young girl who disappears down a rabbit hole, to find herself amongst a place filled with bizarre and wonderful adventures. Vladimir Nabokov’s, Lolita is a fictional memoir, following the life of a man with a disturbed lust for young girls. Carroll and Nabokov, similarly write their novels with a semi-autobiographical tone

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    Lewis Carroll's Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland Philosophy – a subject that had driven people insane for as long as humans know their history. All the time people try to find a meaning, and later controvert it. For example, critics view a novel by Lewis Carroll Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, as a quest for maturity story, Carroll’s view on Victorian Society and even existential meaning on life. All of those interpretations come from philosophical “drive” of the critics. The truth is that

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    Lewis Carroll wrote “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” and a follow up novel “Through the Looking Glass”. Lewis was born on the 27th of January, 1832 under the name Charles Lutwidge Dodgson. He is most famous for his writing style of lyrical nonsense in his works. “In 1856 Carroll met Alice Liddell, the four-year-old daughter of the head of Christ Church. During the next few years Carroll often made up stories for Alice and her sisters. In July 1862, while on a picnic with the Liddell girls

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