preview

Going Further Into Wonderland By Lewis Carroll

Decent Essays

Going Further Into Wonderland Finding your identity as a maturing human, is something many people struggle with. Imagine you are a young girl, soon tumbling down a hole to a whole new world. Lewis Carroll shares the story of a girl named Alice. The book is a fun and creative story, but shares the struggles of a young girl finding her identity. The style of Lewis Carroll is often described as symbolic. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll is written using many symbols. The symbols show children’s identity changes while entering adulthood. The symbols of the garden and the caterpillar 's mushroom, fantasized characters, and the rabbit hole in Wonderland lead Alice to her true identity. The symbols of the garden and the …show more content…

Alice tries to change her size by drinking potions, and eating part of a mushroom. Novels for Students explains, “The physical sign of her loss of identity is the changes in size that take place when she eats or drinks” (¨Alice´s Adventures in Wonderland.¨). The mushroom symbolizes an oddly shaped object that she has to control. In order to gain what she wanted from it, she had to manipulate it. Once she talked to the caterpillar she was able to figure the properties of the mushroom. She successfully got control of her size; “She began by taking the little golden key, and unlocking the door that led into the garden. Then she sat off to work nibbling at the mushroom til she was about a foot high, then she found herself at last in the beautiful garden”(Carroll 66). At last Alice was in the garden, through all the physical changes, Alice began to mature emotionally. Alice was very innocent, and these changes frightened the young girl. She is not only facing her struggles with her own body but, “She is constantly attempting to make rational sense of the messy world of other people’s emotions”(Bratton 4). Alice struggles to face the changes to her physical state, as her identity is changing. Alice is starting the beginning of changing into a woman. This helps represent her want to keep the innocence and not mature. Alice’s identity is changing on the outside. The place of Wonderland can represent the idea of adulthood. Alice is essentially entering adulthood, and

Get Access