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    books. Lewis Carroll was inspired to write Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by one of his children friends‚ named Alice. In the novel‚ Alice is a curious and innocent little girl‚ whom we meet on her travel from childhood to adulthood‚ where she bumps into puberty. The environment in Lewis Carroll’s novel is a vital importance for Alice‚ her reactions and thoughts. Alice

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    Hannah A. Mercado IV Narra Literature Alice in Wonderland is a renown classic written by Lewis Carroll from 1865. While on a boat party‚ Lewis told tales to three children for entertainment. One of the children‚ Alice‚ was enamored by the story and requested that he write it down. This is what inspired the story. It is whimsical and caters to children’s delight and to some readers it is confusing at most. To better understand the tale‚ we will breakdown Alice’s character as an archetypal hero.

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    Ever felt uncomfortable being in a burnt body? Everyday use by Alice Walker is a short story about a mother “mama” and her daughter Maggie who was waiting for her other daughter named Dee to return home. Maggie is a character that stood out because she was someone who battled being burned in a house fire as a child. This character can be described as ashamed‚ dutiful‚ and good-hearted. Maggie can be described as ashamed for many reasons. For example‚ she was caught in a house fire as a child

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    In Disney’s Alice in Wonderland‚ Alice starts off as a “bad girl‚” but eventually becomes a “good girl” via her actions. Thus‚ the narrative arc of the story is that she will conform to traditional gender roles; Disney states that a woman will only be able to thrive in society if she conforms to her prescribed gender roles. A “bad girl” is characterized as being violent‚ aggressive‚ worldly‚ and often monstrous; whereas‚ traditional gender roles favor a “good girl” who is identified as gentle‚ submissive

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    composers of Alice in Wonderland the novel and the film‚ and the Life of Pi the novel‚ have created a world that is both weird and wonderful. They have done this through their selected forms‚ use of language and film techniques to highlight the bizarre and transform it into a world that seems real. Lewis Carrol uses the form of a fairy tale to describe Alice’s adventure down the rabbit hole‚ Tim Burton focuses on visual techniques to emphasise the extraordinary or supernatural nature of the Alice in Wonderland

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    In “Everyday Use” by Alice Walker‚ a family of three women stand in their lawn watching smoke tumble out from where their windows used to be and study their shingles as they disintegrate. The youngest woman‚ Maggie‚ has the most traumatic experience of the three: she was caught in the fire and was severely burned and scarred. The image of her daughter suffering was burned into her mind. The mother was affected by this and also by how her other daughter‚ Dee‚ reacted to this. Dee was content with

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    not take place in normal reality and in fact in “Wonderland” although Alice never does find out the true name of the world she dreamt of. The word “Wonderland” only appears until the last two pages of the novel when Alice’s sister reflects on Alice’s dream. 2. What are the conflicts in Alice in Wonderland? What types of conflict (physical‚ moral‚ intellectual‚ or emotional)? The most prominent intellectual conflict in Alice in Wonderland is her ability to make sense of the nonsensical world she

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    Alice Paul and the Women’s Suffrage Movement Alice Stokes Paul was born January 11th‚ 1885 in Mount Laurel‚ New Jersey. Alice was a suffragist and an activist who made a huge impact in women’s history. Alice attended Swarthmore College‚ and got her Ph.D. from the university of Pennsylvania. Alice then joined the National American Woman Suffrage Association. The Women’s Suffrage Movement basically started after the Seneca Falls Convention‚ which was a meeting‚ created for Lucretia Mott who was

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    A.L. Taylor’s essay "Chess and Theology in the Alice Books" echoes Falconer Madan’s regret that the game of chess in Lewis Carroll’s "Through the Looking Glass" is not properly worked out. As is‚ it contains multiple errors such as the White side being allowed to move nine consecutive times and Queens castling. Dodgson wrote his defense in 1887‚ admitting that his adherence to the rules of chess are lax and that the book is based on a demonstration of moves‚ not a full game. Taylor goes on to

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    Alice Paul was a women’s rights activist during the 1900’s and she became the official advocate for suffrage‚ through the NAWSA. (Katherine H. Adams and Michael L. Keene‚ 1) In her young life‚ she had already accomplished so much then women who had fought for suffrage in the past. She was a radical figure for all women in her day. (Siegel‚ 1) She worked to bring suffrage or the right to vote to all women in the United States. (Siegel‚ 1) Alice Paul dedicated most of her life to the ratification of

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