The Dark Side of Alice in Wonderland
eBook - ePub

The Dark Side of Alice in Wonderland

  1. 176 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Dark Side of Alice in Wonderland

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About This Book

A unique exploration of the character, the author, and the many transformations of Alice in modern culture—often in edgy and menacing ways. The Dark Side of Alice in Wonderland is the first investigation of the vast range of darker, more threatening aspects of this famous story, and the way Alice has been transformed over time. Although the children's story has been in print for over 150 years, the mysteries and rumors surrounding the story and its creator Lewis Carroll have continued to grow. Alice has been transformed—this is the Alice of horror films, Halloween, murder and mystery, spectral ghosts, political satire, mental illnesses, weird feasts, Lolita, Tarot, pornography, and steampunk. The Beatles based famous songs such as "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" and "I am the Walrus" on Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, and she has even attracted the attention of world-famous artists including Salvador Dali. The Japanese version of Lolita is so different from that of novelist Vladimir Nabokov—yet both are based on Alice. This is Alice in Wonderland as you have never seen her before: a dark, sometimes menacing, and threatening character. Was Carroll all that he seemed? The stories of his child friends, nude photographs, and sketches affect the way modern audiences look at the writer. Was he just a lonely academic, a closet pedophile, a brilliant puzzle maker—or even Jack the Ripper? For a book that began life as a simple children's story, it has resulted in a vast array of dark concepts, ideas, and mysteries. With this book, you can step inside the world of Alice in Wonderland—and discover a dark side you never knew existed.

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Yes, you can access The Dark Side of Alice in Wonderland by Angela Youngman in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Littérature & Critique littéraire anglaise. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Year
2021
ISBN
9781526785824

Chapter 1

Who is Alice?

‘Who in the world am I? Ah, that’s the great puzzle.’
Alice in Wonderland
This is the question that Alice asks herself just after she has become a giant and frightened away the White Rabbit.
Was Alice a figment of Lewis Carroll’s imagination or a real girl? It is a question that can never entirely be answered, given the vast array of views and concepts that have used, and continue to use, these stories over the decades. In the 159 years since Lewis Carroll created this iconic story, the historical Alice has emerged in the form of Alice Liddell. Alice has been transformed into incredibly scary versions, turned into a Lolita figure, become a fashion icon, political commentator, the victim of pornography, eroticised and involved in countless murders. Alice has even been turned into a revolutionary within an immersive theatre concept in which the audience realise they are acting out her identity. She has been psychoanalysed, linked to hallucinogenic drugs and turned into medical conditions. Add to that the mysteries that continually surround her creator with suggestions of child abuse, paedophilia and madness – even suggestions of links to Jack the Ripper – and a beloved childhood story takes on a much darker appearance.
The story of Alice begins on 4 July 1862 with a trip on the river Isis, a branch of the River Thames running through the centre of Oxford. Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, a mathematics lecturer at Christ Church College, Oxford and his friend, the Reverend Robinson Duckworth, took Alice, Lorina and Edith Liddell – daughters of the Dean of Christ Church – on a boating trip towards Godstow. It was a hot, sunny afternoon and Alice – just ten years old – quickly became bored. Alice later recalled what happened next:
‘The beginning of Alice was told to me one summer afternoon when the sun was so hot we landed in meadows down the river, deserting the boat to take refuge in the only bit of shade to be found, which was under a newly made hayrick.’
To entertain Alice and her sisters, Charles Dodgson began to tell a story about a bored girl who followed a White Rabbit down a rabbit hole into Wonderland, meeting all kinds of crazy creatures such as the Mad Hatter, the March Hare, Playing Card gardeners painting white roses red, babies turning into pigs and a Queen of Hearts peremptorily ordering executions. Duckworth was so surprised by the story, that he turned round and asked where Dodgson had found it. Dodgson answered, quite simply, ‘I’m inventing it as we go along.’
The children too were enthralled and at the end of the day, Alice requested that Dodgson should write down the story for her as a memento of her ‘golden afternoon’.
It was two years before Dodgson completed his written version of the story. On 26 November 1864, Dodgson visited the Liddells’ home and gave Alice a handwritten manuscript containing the story – Alice’s Adventures Under Ground – complete with his own hand-drawn illustrations. One year later, the story appeared in print for the first time from Macdonald publishers; printed at Dodgson’s own expense and using his established pseudonym of Lewis Carroll, under which he had already published poetry such as the romantic poem Solitude in 1856. Dodgson had even personally commissioned and paid for the leading illustrator of the day – Sir John Tenniel – to undertake the illustrations for Alice in Wonderland. Dodgson never expected to make much money on the books and considered it might even make a loss.
Alice in Wonderland proved to be a success, popular with adults and children. One reviewer described it as ‘a children’s feast of triumph and nonsense; it is nonsense with bonbons and flags … never inhuman, never inelegant … Never tedious’. Queen Victoria wrote to him saying how much she admired it, and that she looked forward to his next book. Despite its publicity, the story did not make Dodgson a rich man. The extra income generated by the book never brought in more than around £1,000 a year, and there was only a limited amount of merchandising ever created such as a stamp box container and a biscuit tin. Although Dodgson considered turning the story into a theatre production, and even approached Arthur Sullivan about the possibility of composing some music, it came to nothing. It was only 20 years after the publication of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland that producer Henry Saville Clarke was given permission to adapt the book on condition that ‘the production should contain nothing of coarseness, or anything suggestive of coarseness’.
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland has never been out of print, with millions of copies being sold worldwide. It has been translated into 176 languages making it one of the most read books of all time.
Successive generations have not only enjoyed the story but have used it in ways far removed from anything that Dodgson could ever have imagined. After all, as a clergyman in minor orders, he would have undoubtedly been horrified at the way in which pornographers have put the story to use. Changing cultures and viewpoints have brought new opportunities but have also meant that the story has been analysed and criticised in ways that the original readers would never have anticipated.
Even the book’s author has come under considerable scrutiny, with innumerable opinions of his life, character and actions being put forward.
In a talk for the US Ripper Conference in 2000, entitled Jack Through the Looking Glass (or Wallace in Wonderland), Karoline Leach commented:
‘“Lewis Carroll” has always been at the centre of a powerful mythology. His Alice books have tapped into the depths of the collective psyche in ways we cannot and never will fully understand. In some curious way, he seems to have told an allegorical story of what it is to be human, confused and alone in a mad and infinite universe.
‘The “shy clergyman” at the heart of this story has become that strange and inexplicable thing – an icon. He was seen as a ‘scholar-saint’ who avoided the adult world, a ‘perpetual child’ who could only relate to children; a tragic deviant whose lifelong passion for a child – Alice Liddell – fired his burning creativity. As an icon to ‘otherness’ did “Carroll” become famous and infamous. After his death, he was simply rebuilt in a different, ‘better’, image. For the Victorians and Edwardians, he became the ultimate symbol of innocence, of the elf-like and unworldly soul of Man before the Fall, whose life must be seen to have been beyond the taint of adult corruption.
‘For the modern world, he became the symbol of hypocrisy, of secret appetites, the disordered sage, the patron saint of Freudian deviancy. All of these images – of Carroll as saint, or Carroll as Dennis Potter’s sweaty palmed deviant, or indeed Carroll as the Whitechapel murderer – are about the triumph of imagination over reality.’
So, take a step into the world of Alice, and discover the many unexpected, darker aspects of this iconic character and her creator whether it be a Japanese cute Lolita, an erotic girl child, an Alice of nightmares, a child abused or not abused. Looking at this darker world of Alice in Wonderland reveals a world of surprises, a world far removed from the Tenniel drawing or, indeed, the universally familiar Walt Disney version.
As Charles Dodgson points out within the books:
‘“And what is the use of a book,” thought Alice, “without pictures or conversation?”’
‘Why, sometimes I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.’
‘It’s no use going back to yesterday, because I was a different person then.’
‘Curiouser and curiouser!’
‘We’re all mad here.’
This is the mad, dark world of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson/Lewis Carroll and Alice in Wonderland.

Chapter 2

The Real Alice

‘What wert thou, Dream Alice, in thy foster-father’s eyes?’
C.L. Dodgson
In November 1865, a storybook entitled Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland arrived at bookshops in England and proved to be an instant success, much to the surprise of the author, C.L. Dodgson aka Lewis Carroll. His first venture into publishing the book some months earlier in June had proved disappointing. The publishers had printed 2,000 copies but on seeing it, the illustrator John Tenniel was so disappointed with the book’s quality that he requested that every copy should be recalled, and the entire book reprinted. Dodgson wrote in his diary that all the copies would be ‘sold as waste paper.’ It represented a major expense for Dodgson, since he had funded all the printing and illustration costs himself. Five thousand revised copies were printed the second time, and he anticipated again losing money, but hoped to make a small profit if it reached a second edition.
So popular has the book become that it has never been out of print since that date. Although he never made a fortune from it, he did get a steady income which proved to be a useful supplement to the payments for lecturing and tutoring at Christ Church College, Oxford. Alice in Wonderland was soon being translated into other languages, with French and German editions appearing as early as 1869, soon followed by Dutch, Swedish, Russian and Italian.
Virtually everyone who read the book believed that the central character, Alice, was just a figment of the author’s imagination, a convenient name around which to fit the storyline.
Years passed. Charles Lutwidge Dodgson died in January 1898. Yet the popularity of Alice in Wonderland continued to grow, being translated into yet more languages including Finnish, Irish, Norwegian, Serbian, Spanish, Japanese and Hebrew. It became an iconic story, an essential part of childhood, with the first film version appearing as early as 1903.
Then, one day in 1928, a lady named Alice Hargreaves contacted Sotheby’s Auction House with a manuscript. She wanted to know whether it was worth selling. Having lost two of her sons in the First World War, experienced the recent death of her husband and facing the spendthrift ways of her third son, she was now in need of money. Opening the manuscript, the auctioneers were astonished to discover that it was a green handwritten book entitled Alice’s Adventures Under Ground, with illustrations by Dodgson himself. Not only that, there was a handwritten dedication to Alice: ‘A Christmas Gift to a Dear Child in Memory of a Summer’s Day’.
When asked about the manuscript and the associated memorabilia, Mrs Hargreaves explained. She was born Alice Liddell and her father had been Dean of Christ Church College. In 1862, Charles Dodgson took her sisters Lorina and Edith together with herself on a boat trip along the river Isis in Oxford. At her request, Dodgson had made up a story to keep her and her sisters entertained. She had enjoyed it so much, she had asked him to write down for her. The book was the result. He had brought it to her home as a gift in 1864.
News of the discovery quickly spread worldwide. At the auction, the price was nearly four times the reserve that had been placed on it by Sothebys. An American collector, Dr A.S.W. Rosenbach, who subsequently became known as ‘the man who bought Alice’, purchased the book for £15,400. Taking it back to America in his trunk led to a moment of total horror. He wrote that he boarded the boat with the manuscript packed carefully in his trunk:
‘… with instructions to place it in my cabin on the Steamer Majestic … Imagine my shock to find … that the trunk was not in my stateroom. Cold chills ran up and down my spine … Finally after spending a sleepless night the baggage master informed me the next day that the missing trunk had been found under the bed in the stateroom of a prominent banker.’
After selling it for £30,000 to Eldridge Johnson, the inventor of the Victrola (a talking machine), Rosenbach later repurchased it when Johnson’s family sold it to pay death duties and wrote in the book that it was ‘purchased by me’. In 1948, the Alice Fund was set up to buy the book back from Rosenbach and return it to the UK as a gift in recognition of the efforts made by the British people during the Second World War: ‘as an expression of thanks to a noble people who held Hitler at bay for a long period singlehanded’.
It was not only the presence of that signed book that attracted global attention, but the story of Alice, the girl who was the inspiration behind that iconic story. It was the first time that Alice Hargreaves had ever referred publicly to her links with Charles Dodgson. Even though the Liddells continued living at the Deanery, contact between Charles Dodgson and the Liddell family had all but ceased in 1862, just after that memorable journey. She had not acknowledged any receipt of that handwritten book, nor had he attended her wedding even though he had sent her a wedding gift. That too had not been acknowledged. The only public acknowledgement she made of her connection to Dodgson was in 1892, when he wrote to her, telling of the book’s success as it had by that point sold over 120,000 copies. She responded with a polite, but cool letter. An invitation to tea when she visited Oxford in 1878 resulted in a short, courteous visit accompanied by her sister. Alice did not attend his funeral in 1898.
Charles Dodgson was already living at Christ Church when the Liddell family arrived in Oxford following Henry Liddell’s appointment as Dean of Christ Church College in 1856. Until that point, Liddell had been the headmaster of Westminster School, as well as having been appointed the domestic chaplain to Prince Albert and preaching at church services at Windsor. Liddell was a notable scholar, having jointly edited a Greek/ English lexicon with a fellow academic Robert Scott. This was the first time such a lexicon had been created and it proved extremely popular, being reprinted several times. By 1869 there had been six edit...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. Chapter 1: Who is Alice?
  6. Chapter 2: The Real Alice
  7. Chapter 3: Women & Child Friend Alice
  8. Chapter 4: Photo Alice
  9. Chapter 5: Lolita Alice
  10. Chapter 6: X-Rated & Banned Alice
  11. Chapter 7: Ripper Alice
  12. Chapter 8: Murder Mystery Alice
  13. Chapter 9: Mad Alice
  14. Chapter 10: Drug Alice
  15. Chapter 11: Surreal Alice
  16. Chapter 12: Horror Alice
  17. Chapter 13: Occult Alice
  18. Chapter 14: Bizarre Alice
  19. Chapter 15: The Last Mystery
  20. Resources
  21. Plate section