The Writings of Lewis Carroll

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Lewis Carroll

Reverend Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, better known as Lewis Carroll, was born January 27th 1832 in Daresbury, Cheshire, England to a family of 13. His family was one of the church, instilling the values of Christianity from an early age. Even as a child Carroll was very academically inclined and after being educated at home for many years was sent to a private school nearby at the age of 12 , after which he moved on to Rugby. In 1851 he began attending Oxford, his fathers alma mater, where he began to study mathematics. Carroll went on to publish many mathematical works, though never under his pseudonym. Lewis Carroll was a name reserved as an author primarily for his literary nonsense.

Literary nonsense is a genre of literature that depends on a balance of sense and non-sense, as well as order and chaos, to engage the reader. Lewis Carroll used nonsense writing as a way to seize the attention of the reader and allow them to view things in an alternate way. He wrote many children’s stories over the years and was inspired to write them for one particular little girl Alice Pleasance Liddell, one of his dear friends three daughters, who he remained close to until his death on January 14th 1898 from influenza. Carroll is said to have used many of his own experiences in his writing and it is a speculation that Carroll was a victim of what is now known as “Alice in Wonderland Syndrome” or micropsia/ macropsia and that he based Alice’s frequent change in size on his own personal experiences. Lewis Carroll (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson) is best known for his literary nonsense seen in his novels in which he uses contrasting tone, creative imagery, and meaningful symbolism in a such a way that causes the reader to questi...

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...inds to his stories, allowing them to see the tenderness that is behind the eyes of a child.

Works Cited

Leach, Karoline. ”Charles Lutwidge Dodgson: A Brief Biography.” http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/carroll/bio1.html. Nov 25 2004. Mar 20 2011

“Literary Nonsense.” http://nonsense.vinylsymphony.org/about.php

May 9 2008. Mar 27 2011

Lu Yuanting. “Health Talk: Alice in Wonderland Syndrome.” http://thetartan.org/2009/1/19/scitech/healthtalk. Jan. 19 2009. Mar 27 2011

Carroll, Lewis. Sylvie and Bruno, New York: Barnes and Noble Inc. 2010. Print.

Carroll, Lewis. Sylvie and Bruno Concluded. New York: Barnes and Noble Inc. 2010. Print.

Carroll, Lewis. Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There. New York: Barnes and Noble Inc. 2010. Print.#

Carroll Lewis. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. New York: Barnes and Noble Inc. 2010. Print.

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