wrote this paper in High school. It got an A. With use of this essay cite works to "Kristin’s People Places and Things" Tewksbury‚ MA: Free paper Inc.‚ 1999.</center> <br> <br> <br>Lewis Carroll’s works Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland & Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There are by many people considered nonsense books for children. Of course‚ they are‚ but they are also much more. Lewis Carroll had a great talent of intertwining nonsense and logic‚ and therefore creating sense within
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children’s literature is maturation and grasping with adulthood. In keeping with this tradition‚ Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland presents a girl who transforms immensely from the bored little girl who can’t imagine reading a book without pictures to the mature adult described at the end of the novel. Throughout much of the novel‚ the reader witnesses Alice struggling with frequent‚ rapid changes in her body. While the repeated size changes in the book serve to illustrate the difficulties
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In Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice‚ the novel portrays predominantly wealthy‚ Caucasian characters. There are no African American or other ethnicities present in the novel. Unlike Pride and Prejudice‚ however‚ Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland is bursting with altogether unusually illustrated ethnicities. Although both were written before the 20th century‚ there is an obvious difference in the use (or lack thereof) of diversity and ethnicities. In Pride and Prejudice‚ all characters are Caucasian
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the different devices of wordplay that authors use. Authors use wordplay for many different reasons. They use it to poke fun at the weaknesses and problems of the society; they also use it to make their literature more fun‚ and interesting. Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll is an example of a book that also serves as a satire. Lewis Carroll was born and raised in England during the time of Queen Victoria. In that time‚ and also in the book‚ there were two social classes‚ the elites‚ and the commoners
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ago and had set the path for modern-day heroes to advance. One example is the classic tale of “Alice in Wonderland” in the version of “Tough Alice”‚ where the protagonist‚ Alice‚ falls through a rabbit hole consisting of her imagination and encounters the Jabberwock‚ the monster
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of the Resistance 5. eze] - high‚ go up 6. fairfarren - farewell‚ fair skies" "May you travel far under 7. Frabjous day - the day Alice slays the Jabberwocky and frees Underland from the oppression of the Red Queen 8. frumious - filthy with a very bad smell 9. Futterwacken - a dance of unbridled joy 10. ga]]ymoggers 11. Gribling - crazy the day Alice will return to Underland 12. gudd]er’s scut - thief’s ass 13. Gummer Slough - a dangerous swamp of thick viscous mud 14. Horunvendush
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Feminism in Alice in Wonderland During the Victorian Era‚ women were expected to behave in a very prim and proper manner. Tim Burton’s adaptation of Alice in Wonderland is a tale of Alice’s return to Wonderland‚ where she saves Wonderland and herself‚ defying her role as a young woman during the Victorian Era. Alice challenges the feminist theory by defying her social role as a damsel in distress. A damsel in distress is a stereotype commonly used in literature to describe a young‚ innocent
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this novel being Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland‚ provides an episodic of short stories of her adventures instead of just one long adventure throughout the novel. This holds up throughout the novel as each chapter is usually a different adventure or “story”. The title can also foreshadow that the novel will 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
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artificial story‚ or an absolute dishonest story. Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass are not novels about fairies or are completely false stories‚ but they do contain imaginable artificial plots in which a young girl named Alice travels to different worlds in her dreams. Through the creative adventure of these dream stories‚ one could vaguely qualify them as a fairy tale. Tolkien’s perspective opposes the label of fairy tales to Alice stories by which he states that dream stories may
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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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