Cоntents intrоductiоn chapter I. The life and work of Lewis Carroll
Alice in wonderland development of events
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2.1. Alice in wonderland development of events
The ‘Alice’ books have always been a favourite subject for analysis, as the story lends itself to various interpretations. On the following pages you can find deeper analyses of the origins of the texts and illustrations, characters, and ‘hidden meanings’ in the Alice books. There are several levels of analysis from which you can look at the ‘Alice’ books, when trying to determine what’s behind them: 1. Purposeful parodies and references Lewis Carroll actively incorporated and parodied aspects of his environment and the Victorian culture in his books. An example is the parodying of the poems that children had to learn by heart in his days. The original poems behind his parodies are easy to recognize.6 Also, he made references to actual events and people in his stories. ______________________________ 6. Brown, James Dean. 2004. Understanding Research in Second Language Learning: A Teacher’s Guide to Statistics and Research Design. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. For example, Alice and her sisters appear several times in the books, and some incidents getting very wet during a trip because of unexpected rain, and trying to get dry again) have found their way into the story. By doing this, Carroll made the story extra appealing to his original audience: the real Alice and her sisters. When publishing the book, Carroll left out several of these intimate jokes that other readers wouldn’t understand. But many still made it into the published version. As the author had numerous interests, they also reflect in his writing. Therefore you can find scientific, mathematical, psychological, literary, artistic, political as well as philosophical references in the stories.Influences from his environment There are also aspects out of the author’s environment that he knowingly or unknowingly must have integrated into the story. Inspiration is a peculiar thing; many events and forgotten memories may influence it. It is certainly not unthinkable that characters like the Cheshire Cat or White Rabbit were inspired by things Carroll read, saw, or otherwise encountered in his lifetime. However, most of the time we won’t know for sure if it was a deliberate act to weave these aspects into his story, or that he was not aware of the triggers that inspired his ideas. Hidden meanings Many people believe that the books also contain hidden meanings on a much deeper level, like the promotion of drug use, or an attempt to mock the political situation. However, most of these allegations rely on speculations and interpretations. We have no definite ‘proof’ that Carroll meant anything at all with his stories, except to amuse his child friends. Carroll himself wrote the following to a friend in America, when being asked about the meaning of his poem ‘The Hunting of the Snark’: “I’m very much afraid I didn’t mean anything but nonsense. Still, you know, words mean more than we mean to express when we use them; so a whole book ought to mean a great deal more than the writer means. So, whatever good meanings are in the book, I’m glad to accept as the meaning of the book.” (source: Collingwood, “The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll”) This comment is also applicable to Carroll’s Alice stories. In the article ‘Alice on the Stage‘, he told us about how he expanded the original tale for publication: … many more added themselves when, years afterwards, I wrote it all over again for publication: but (this may interest some readers of ‘Alice’ to know) every such idea and nearly every word of the dialogue, came of itself. Sometimes an idea comes at night, when I have had to get up and strike a light to note it down sometimes when out on a lonely winter walk, when I have had to `top, and with half frozen fingers jot down a few words which should keep the new-born idea from perishing but whenever or however it comes, it comes of itself. I cannot set invention going like a clock, by any voluntary winding up: nor do I believe that any original writing (and what other writing is worth preserving?) was ever so produced. If you sit down, unimpassioned and uninspired, and tell yourself to write for so many hours, you will merely produce (at least I am sure I should merely produce) some of that article which fills, so far as I can judge, two thirds of most magazines most easy to write most weary to read men call it ‘padding’, and it is to my mind one of the most detestable things in modern literature. ‘Alice’ and the ‘Looking Glass’ are made up almost wholly of bits and scraps, single ideas which came of themselves. Therefore, any theories that claim Carroll’s ‘Alice’ books have one integral, underlying meaning should be taken with a grain of salt. The same levels of analysis can be applied to the illustrations. Carroll sometimes gave Tenniel precise instructions on what to draw, which may have been not only a matter of visual preference, but also an additional way to incorporate references into the story. Tenniel may also have added his own jokes and references to the time he lived in, in his drawings. In addition, illustrators have a certain consistent style, and are also knowingly and unknowingly influenced by their environment and memories. Therefore Tenniel’s drawing style, jokes and other ‘trademarks’ are not necessarily specific for the Alice books, but can also be found in his other works. In this subsection of the website, I’ll identify several of the parodies and hidden references that can (supposedly) be found in the Alice stories. Story Origins things out of Lewis Carroll’s environment that inspired him when writing the story of Alice in Wonderland Picture Origins - things that inspired John Tenniel’s illustrations Poem Origins - poems that were parodied by Carroll in his story Poems from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland Poems from Through the Looking-Glass Download 94.35 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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