Alice In Wonderland Research Paper

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Fantasy World
By looking at Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, one can see that Lewis Carroll included the themes of understanding one’s true identity, and distinguishing between real versus fantasy life because he was a unique man who was able to understand and connect with what was going on in children’s minds. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland is a story by the English author, Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, written under the pen name Lewis Carroll. It tells the story of a girl named Alice, who falls down a rabbit-hole into a fantasy world. Lewis Carroll experienced an unique lifestyle, successfully novels, and unusual relationships.
Lewis Carroll was born on January twenty seven, 1832, in Daresbury, Cheshire, England. He took his name Charles Lutwidge, then translated it into the Latin “Carolus Ludouicus,” …show more content…

Some people had their suspicions, but many did not act on it. In 1930’s biographers and scholars have questioned the relationship with the ten-year-old girl to whom he first told the story about (Smithsonian.com). In 1863, Carroll proposed to Alice, eleven-year-old too young, even by victorian mores. Alice told Carroll she was ten, but she was really fourteen, or old enough to entertain formal suitors (Smithsonian.com). In 1887 Carroll wrote his gentle dream-child, the real Alice had receded into the distance of memory. He played with “real”-world forms sometimes by making things more orderly and sometimes by making then less.
In 1990’s, Donald Thomas, Michael Backwell, and Morton Cohen, suggested that he held pedophilic urges but never acted on them. Alice’s mom started to notice some weird things going on between the two of them and though the relationship they had needed to come to an end. Alice’s parents and Alice didn 't see Carroll for months because of the relationship he had with Alice (Smithsonian.com)

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