Alice In Wonderland And A Midsummer Night's Dream Analysis

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Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and A Midsummer Night’s Dream are two pieces of fiction that have been read for generations. Though their plots differ, each story exemplifies different ideologies of fantasy, and has similar fictional elements. Both stories feature a protagonist’s exit from the mundane world into a world of fantasy, and in both stories these protagonists return to their world changed by their experiences in the alternate realm. The stories of A Midsummer Night’s Dream and Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland develop differently, and might therefore require antagonists with unique qualities. However, this is not the case. In fact, when correlated, Puck and the Red Queen appear to have similar characteristics as they both derive …show more content…

Freud’s theory of wish fulfillment before 1920 was defined in two theses, the first being the content of a dream was the fulfillment of the wish. (Grünbaum, 1994) Freud later retracted this in favor of his second thesis: the motive for the dream is always the wish. (Grünbaum, 1994) Both theses are seen in the two stories. At the beginning of her journey Helena is not desired by either of the men, but wants desperately to be loved. The dream (or Puck’s potion) makes this desire a reality, and causes both men to fall in love with her. Even after the lovers’ affairs are sorted and they leave the realm of the marvelous, Demetrius continues to love Helena - either by his own volition, or by the continued effect of the potion depending on which theory one uses to negotiate the text. Correspondingly, Alice longs for a world of complete nonsense. Wonderland, the Red Queen’s kingdom, is the realization of her desire within a dream, corresponding to Freud’s theory of wish fulfillment. It is worth mentioning that though the antagonists offer the realities which correspond directly to the protagonists’ desires, the protagonists of each story negotiate the manifestations of their desires in different ways. In Midsummer Night’s Dream Helena accepts the most ideal version of her wish fulfillment-Demetrius’ love. Conversely, when Alice is faced with the realization of her desire, she rejects the wish fulfillment and returns to the mundane world with an appreciation for its more sensible

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