Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

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    coming of age as a timeless universal literary theme. Among coming of age novels include Lewis Carroll’s tale about a seven-year-old Victorian girl named Alice. In the novel Alice’s Adventures

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    Wonderland Identity

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    mistaken for someone she is not or magical foods and drinks are causing her to change in size, from the moment she gets in wonderland Alice is in constant wonder of who she is. Her identity is something she feels that she has lost and she simply cannot remember who she really is, “Alice’s fall down the rabbit hole introduces a comparable identity crisis” (Haughton 194). In Wonderland, Alice struggles with the importance of knowing herself and is often ordered to identify herself by the characters she

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    Through Alice’s experiences in Wonderland, she gradually gains empowering intuition and self appreciation in order to embrace her own identity. Throughout Alice adventures, she is asked to ‘identify’ herself by several of the characters in Wonderland, and often she is impotent to respond. Alice usually feels that she is too tall, or too small to be herself, or that she is another person altogether, “I must have been changed for Mabel!” (Carroll 20). Since Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland is a book

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    Natalie McAllister Ms. Listro English IV Level 1- MOD G 15 April 2016 The Maturation in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland Herman Heese once said, “I began to understand that suffering and disappointments and melancholy are there not to vex us or cheapen us or deprive us of our dignity but to mature and transfigure us” (Goodreads). Hermann Hesse was a German, who wrote about mind and body, spirit and nature, and spiritual search within oneself. Hesse explains that through one’s life, an individual

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    Wonderland Identity

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    “Down, down, down” the endless rabbit hole, a little girl begins her adventure through a queer variety fantasies. Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking- Glass depicts the  protagonist, Alice, who encounters unique creatures such as the white rabbit, caterpillar, Cheshire cat, duchess, and many more. Alice pursued the white rabbit which consequently led her to several adventures like meeting a caterpillar smoking a hookah, joining in a tea party, playing a game of

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    Sara Slusher Dr. Kimmel LIT 153 13 April 2015 Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland: A Satire Late rabbits, talking cats, and dancing cards are just some of the un-natural occurrences that take place in Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. In today’s society with competing books, such as Harry Potter, these elements in the book may seem like no big deal, but for the time period the book was published, these were anything but normal. This children’s book was first published in 1865 in the

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    Lewis Carroll 's “Alice 's Adventures in Wonderland and Though the Looking-Glass are classics of the English language, Vying with the Bible and William Shakespeare as source of quotation(Blake, Kathleen 112).” Lewis Carroll 's Alice 's Adventures in Wonderland has always been a favorite for many children since it came out. It also has been interesting for any adult that has read it. Lewis Carroll is a literary genius even though he wrote plenty of nonsense. Born on Janurry 27, 1832, Lewis Carrol

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    Maturation in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland In the nonsensical world of Wonderland, Alice falls down an infinite tunnel into an outbreak of mad sense, as well as a flurry of boisterous royalty and mad company. In the novel Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Alice is confronted with the preposterous logic of the most absurd characters. In the strange culture of Wonderland, adaptation is vital, which changes Alice from a meager girl to an outspoken character. As Alice wanders through the unpredictable

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    discourse is “any particular interpretive viewpoint” (244), meaning that it can be different for each person. However, both grand narratives and dominant discourses are used by those in power to control society. Lewis Carroll 's novel, Alice 's Adventures in Wonderland, shows how society itself mirrors the discourses of those in power. The book was published in the mid-1800s, when education started to become more important and when schools had overly strict standards for their students. Alice, one of the

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    Lewis Carroll          Ever curious about the author of  Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland? That person would be Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, otherwise known as Lewis Carroll, his famous alter ego. Carroll has written many books that have transformed the art of literature. His work has appealed to an abundance of children all over the world. Lewis Carroll contributed to fiction literature by creating a story that was the ultimate adventure to children everywhere. Carroll was born on January 27, 1832

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