Lewis Carroll Research Paper

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Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland has been a very popular book since its release in 1865, which led to a sequel in 1871. Lewis Carroll’s crazy imagination has entertained millions since.
Charles Lutwidge Dodgeson, best known by, Lewis Carroll, was born in the village of Daresbury, England on January 27, 1832. Carroll is the oldest of eleven siblings and was raised in a rectory by his parents Reverend Charles Dodgson and Frances Jane Lutwidge. Carroll excelled in math and won many academic prizes. Carroll became an avid photographer and wrote essays, political pamphlets, and poetry.
Carroll’s interests included photography and public speaking, though he abandoned them between 1880 and 1881 to focus on writing. Carroll’s philosophies were based …show more content…

While teaching at Christ Church, Oxford, Charles Dodgson wrote comic literature and parodies for a humorous paper. He would sign them with “B.B.” and the editor asked Carroll to use a proper nom de plume. He first used “Dares” after his birthplace in Daresbury, then Dodgson wrote to his editor and suggested a number of anagrams based on the letters of his name. “Lewis Carroll” was finally decided on, which is derived from a rearrangement of most of the letter in his real name. He was fascinated with the anagram, that they would later be used in Alice’s Adventures and explains much work in his later …show more content…

Alice is told in a form of a dream, a story of Alice’s dream in a third person point-of-view. Alice was not intended to instruct children in points of religion, morality, etiquette, and growing to be mature. Alice was actually a dream or visual Carroll personally had. Alice’s Adventures was solely written for entertainment and originally only for Carroll’s friend Alice.
Wonderland is a world of wonders, a world where animals and humans speak, and every animal nags, whines, and complains like an adult. It’s as though Carroll were trying to frustrate logical communication and trying to turn ordinary into the impossible. Only laws in Wonderland is chaos; all is nonsensical.
The key focus Carroll had behind Alice was the relationships between the development of a child’s language and physical growth of a child. The dream magic mesmerizes children, and makes them laugh, while adults take it more serious; children love the