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Fantasy vs repression: representations of the child and the feminine in Lewis Carroll’s Alice Cycle

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Resumo:The aim of this dissertation is to bring Lewis Carroll (1832 - 1898) to light as an important writer in the context of the development of Children’s Literature. The work researches both the specific background and the innovations that the author incorporated in his revolutionary Alice cycle: Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There (1871), with regard both to the evolution of the concept of childhood and his representations of the feminine, which echo the beginning of a change in children’s and women’s role in society. Moving away from a crude realism, the tendency that characterized the early Victorian era, the author presents a fantastic style encompassing a language full of situational humour and word play, and a distinctive narrative episodic flow. In order to stimulate the child’s imagination, Carroll rewrites the more traditional forms of the fairy tale and the fable, namely through his unexpected introduction of challenging dialogues and allusive illustrations in his fantastic narratives. Additionally, he recurs to the dream element to suggest certain latent and underlying meanings that are present in most episodes and situations, intending to enhance an eventual crisis of identity in Alice and in the reader himself. The literary nonsense that characterizes the author’s writing thus allows two distinct levels of reading – the child’s and the adult’s. In the first, it is possible to see Carroll’s clear perception of the child as a sensitive being with a particular way of understanding the world. However, in the second, Carroll’s nonsense allows him to critically parody Victorian society and its strict values, without compromising his own social and professional position as a deacon and a mathematician at Oxford. Concerning the female figure in Alice, there is a prevalence of strong and independent representations; these are mostly severe and authoritarian characters who, when contextualized within the Victorian era, demonstrate a bold and critical subversion. Thus, questions of gender and the division between the public and domestic spheres are central aspects underlying his text, allowing Carroll to revisit female educational patterns, marital relationships and even notions of motherhood. These issues are closely connected with the central question of this study, which is the attempt to demonstrate Carroll’s unique form of representing fantasy and the fantastic: one that is initially intended to mirror freedom, as a value or practice opposed to repression, but which ultimately may also represent a form of repression. Carroll’s fantasy aims at representing a parallel world without rules, in order to confront the strict rules that exist in the real world, which signify repression. But, in the end, the reader concludes that a (mad) world without rules equally results in a repressing and unjust world, grounded in pure arbitrariness. The ways in which the author reinvented fantasy inspired modern children's literature and also other authors who demonstrated a particular interest in his style, such as James Joyce or Virginia Woolf. Likewise, he came to be a major influence in Surrealism and its artists, who indeed recognized him as their predecessor.
Autores principais:Machado, Hugo Filipe Rodrigues
Assunto:Child(hood) Feminine Nonsense Fantasy Repression Infância Feminino Fantasia Repressão Humanidades::Línguas e Literaturas
Ano:2017
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:dissertação de mestrado
Tipo de acesso:acesso aberto
Instituição associada:Universidade do Minho
Idioma:inglês
Origem:RepositóriUM - Universidade do Minho
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author Machado, Hugo Filipe Rodrigues
author_facet Machado, Hugo Filipe Rodrigues
author_role author
contributor_name_str_mv Guimarães, Paula Alexandra
RepositóriUM - Universidade do Minho
country_str PT
creators_json_txt [{\"Person.name\":\"Machado, Hugo Filipe Rodrigues\"}]
datacite.contributors.contributor.contributorName.fl_str_mv Guimarães, Paula Alexandra
RepositóriUM - Universidade do Minho
datacite.creators.creator.creatorName.fl_str_mv Machado, Hugo Filipe Rodrigues
datacite.date.Accepted.fl_str_mv 2017-01-01T00:00:00Z
datacite.date.available.fl_str_mv 2018-10-08T14:01:06Z
datacite.date.embargoed.fl_str_mv 2018-10-08T14:01:06Z
datacite.rights.fl_str_mv http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
datacite.subjects.subject.fl_str_mv Child(hood)
Feminine
Nonsense
Fantasy
Repression
Infância
Feminino
Fantasia
Repressão
Humanidades::Línguas e Literaturas
datacite.titles.title.fl_str_mv Fantasy vs repression: representations of the child and the feminine in Lewis Carroll’s Alice Cycle
dc.contributor.none.fl_str_mv Guimarães, Paula Alexandra
RepositóriUM - Universidade do Minho
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Machado, Hugo Filipe Rodrigues
dc.date.Accepted.fl_str_mv 2017-01-01T00:00:00Z
dc.date.available.fl_str_mv 2018-10-08T14:01:06Z
dc.date.embargoed.fl_str_mv 2018-10-08T14:01:06Z
dc.format.none.fl_str_mv application/pdf
dc.identifier.none.fl_str_mv https://hdl.handle.net/1822/56175
dc.language.none.fl_str_mv eng
dc.rights.none.fl_str_mv http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv Child(hood)
Feminine
Nonsense
Fantasy
Repression
Infância
Feminino
Fantasia
Repressão
Humanidades::Línguas e Literaturas
dc.title.fl_str_mv Fantasy vs repression: representations of the child and the feminine in Lewis Carroll’s Alice Cycle
dc.type.none.fl_str_mv http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_bdcc
description The aim of this dissertation is to bring Lewis Carroll (1832 - 1898) to light as an important writer in the context of the development of Children’s Literature. The work researches both the specific background and the innovations that the author incorporated in his revolutionary Alice cycle: Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There (1871), with regard both to the evolution of the concept of childhood and his representations of the feminine, which echo the beginning of a change in children’s and women’s role in society. Moving away from a crude realism, the tendency that characterized the early Victorian era, the author presents a fantastic style encompassing a language full of situational humour and word play, and a distinctive narrative episodic flow. In order to stimulate the child’s imagination, Carroll rewrites the more traditional forms of the fairy tale and the fable, namely through his unexpected introduction of challenging dialogues and allusive illustrations in his fantastic narratives. Additionally, he recurs to the dream element to suggest certain latent and underlying meanings that are present in most episodes and situations, intending to enhance an eventual crisis of identity in Alice and in the reader himself. The literary nonsense that characterizes the author’s writing thus allows two distinct levels of reading – the child’s and the adult’s. In the first, it is possible to see Carroll’s clear perception of the child as a sensitive being with a particular way of understanding the world. However, in the second, Carroll’s nonsense allows him to critically parody Victorian society and its strict values, without compromising his own social and professional position as a deacon and a mathematician at Oxford. Concerning the female figure in Alice, there is a prevalence of strong and independent representations; these are mostly severe and authoritarian characters who, when contextualized within the Victorian era, demonstrate a bold and critical subversion. Thus, questions of gender and the division between the public and domestic spheres are central aspects underlying his text, allowing Carroll to revisit female educational patterns, marital relationships and even notions of motherhood. These issues are closely connected with the central question of this study, which is the attempt to demonstrate Carroll’s unique form of representing fantasy and the fantastic: one that is initially intended to mirror freedom, as a value or practice opposed to repression, but which ultimately may also represent a form of repression. Carroll’s fantasy aims at representing a parallel world without rules, in order to confront the strict rules that exist in the real world, which signify repression. But, in the end, the reader concludes that a (mad) world without rules equally results in a repressing and unjust world, grounded in pure arbitrariness. The ways in which the author reinvented fantasy inspired modern children's literature and also other authors who demonstrated a particular interest in his style, such as James Joyce or Virginia Woolf. Likewise, he came to be a major influence in Surrealism and its artists, who indeed recognized him as their predecessor.
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spelling engporThe aim of this dissertation is to bring Lewis Carroll (1832 - 1898) to light as an important writer in the context of the development of Children’s Literature. The work researches both the specific background and the innovations that the author incorporated in his revolutionary Alice cycle: Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There (1871), with regard both to the evolution of the concept of childhood and his representations of the feminine, which echo the beginning of a change in children’s and women’s role in society. Moving away from a crude realism, the tendency that characterized the early Victorian era, the author presents a fantastic style encompassing a language full of situational humour and word play, and a distinctive narrative episodic flow. In order to stimulate the child’s imagination, Carroll rewrites the more traditional forms of the fairy tale and the fable, namely through his unexpected introduction of challenging dialogues and allusive illustrations in his fantastic narratives. Additionally, he recurs to the dream element to suggest certain latent and underlying meanings that are present in most episodes and situations, intending to enhance an eventual crisis of identity in Alice and in the reader himself. The literary nonsense that characterizes the author’s writing thus allows two distinct levels of reading – the child’s and the adult’s. In the first, it is possible to see Carroll’s clear perception of the child as a sensitive being with a particular way of understanding the world. However, in the second, Carroll’s nonsense allows him to critically parody Victorian society and its strict values, without compromising his own social and professional position as a deacon and a mathematician at Oxford. Concerning the female figure in Alice, there is a prevalence of strong and independent representations; these are mostly severe and authoritarian characters who, when contextualized within the Victorian era, demonstrate a bold and critical subversion. Thus, questions of gender and the division between the public and domestic spheres are central aspects underlying his text, allowing Carroll to revisit female educational patterns, marital relationships and even notions of motherhood. These issues are closely connected with the central question of this study, which is the attempt to demonstrate Carroll’s unique form of representing fantasy and the fantastic: one that is initially intended to mirror freedom, as a value or practice opposed to repression, but which ultimately may also represent a form of repression. Carroll’s fantasy aims at representing a parallel world without rules, in order to confront the strict rules that exist in the real world, which signify repression. But, in the end, the reader concludes that a (mad) world without rules equally results in a repressing and unjust world, grounded in pure arbitrariness. The ways in which the author reinvented fantasy inspired modern children's literature and also other authors who demonstrated a particular interest in his style, such as James Joyce or Virginia Woolf. Likewise, he came to be a major influence in Surrealism and its artists, who indeed recognized him as their predecessor.application/pdfporFantasy vs repression: representations of the child and the feminine in Lewis Carroll’s Alice CycleMachado, Hugo Filipe RodriguesGuimarães, Paula AlexandraHostingInstitutionOrganizationalRepositóriUM - Universidade do Minhoe-mailmailto:repositorium@usdb.uminho.ptrepositorium@usdb.uminho.ptTID2019757772018-10-08T14:01:06Z201720172017-01-01T00:00:00ZHandlehttps://hdl.handle.net/1822/56175http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2open accessChild(hood)FeminineNonsenseFantasyRepressionInfânciaFemininoFantasiaRepressãohttp://www.oecd.org/science/inno/38235147.pdfFields of Science and Technology (FOS)Humanidades::Línguas e Literaturas3474670 bytesliteraturehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_bdccmaster thesishttp://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2application/pdffulltexthttps://repositorium.uminho.pt/bitstreams/bffcda17-acc0-4f44-8b84-a04d4e183d59/download
spellingShingle Fantasy vs repression: representations of the child and the feminine in Lewis Carroll’s Alice Cycle
Machado, Hugo Filipe Rodrigues
Child(hood)
Feminine
Nonsense
Fantasy
Repression
Infância
Feminino
Fantasia
Repressão
Humanidades::Línguas e Literaturas
status SINGLETON
subject.fl_str_mv Child(hood)
Feminine
Nonsense
Fantasy
Repression
Infância
Feminino
Fantasia
Repressão
subject.other.fl_str_mv Humanidades::Línguas e Literaturas
title Fantasy vs repression: representations of the child and the feminine in Lewis Carroll’s Alice Cycle
title_full Fantasy vs repression: representations of the child and the feminine in Lewis Carroll’s Alice Cycle
title_fullStr Fantasy vs repression: representations of the child and the feminine in Lewis Carroll’s Alice Cycle
title_full_unstemmed Fantasy vs repression: representations of the child and the feminine in Lewis Carroll’s Alice Cycle
title_short Fantasy vs repression: representations of the child and the feminine in Lewis Carroll’s Alice Cycle
title_sort Fantasy vs repression: representations of the child and the feminine in Lewis Carroll’s Alice Cycle
topic Child(hood)
Feminine
Nonsense
Fantasy
Repression
Infância
Feminino
Fantasia
Repressão
Humanidades::Línguas e Literaturas
topic_facet Child(hood)
Feminine
Nonsense
Fantasy
Repression
Infância
Feminino
Fantasia
Repressão
Humanidades::Línguas e Literaturas
url https://hdl.handle.net/1822/56175
visible 1