Welcome to Gaia! ::

The Phoenix Rising

Back to Guilds

For the creative roleplayer 

Tags: Role play, Chatting, Poll Whoring, Contests, Friends 

Reply Twisted« Horror Rolplay
Alice Charries (Non twisted)

Quick Reply

Enter both words below, separated by a space:

Can't read the text? Click here

Submit

X Twilight Abyss X
Captain

7,750 Points
  • Hygienic 200
  • Signature Look 250
  • Forum Sophomore 300
PostPosted: Wed Sep 09, 2009 4:38 pm


Here is a little guide to the origionals before you twist them. Just for background sake.

Alice: The young protagonist of the novel, Alice is based on Lewis Carroll's real-life friend, the young Alice Liddell, daughter of Carroll's boss. Alice, in the novel, is a girl struggling with adolescence and her transformation from an idle child to a conscientious adult.

White Rabbit: The Rabbit is the through line of the novel. That is, he is the character that Alice follows, and he reappears to get things moving again. In a way, he is a sort of guide, though he is too worried about himself to really be guiding anyone.

Dinah: Alice's cat. Dinah is very good at hunting and killing animals, a fact that Alice can't seem to keep to herself. This is most embarrassing when she is in the company of a great many animals who are horrified (rather than impressed) by the notion of a Cat Hunter.

Little Bill: A little salamander.

Mary Ann: The White Rabbit's maid. The Rabbit mistakes Alice for his maid at one point.

Caterpillar: A wise guru who sits atop a large mushroom smoking mysterious things through an Arabic Hookah. The Caterpillar is meant to be a wise man who provides Alice with the means of control over her growth by way of a magic mushroom.

Cheshire Cat: A smiling cat who can disappears and reappears at will. The Cheshire Cat is the ironic middle between adulthood and childhood. He reveals to Alice how, after you have mastered the rules (a skill which the Caterpillar basically teaches Alice) then rules can start to master you. He sends her forward to the Mad Hatter and then to the Queen as a lesson in what happens when the rules get out of hand: madness, a sort of childhood for adults.

March Hare: A mad creature who takes tea all of the time because he lives in a state of frozen time.

Mad Hatter: The leader of a perpetual tea time. Hatters were mad because they used mercury in the production of hats from fur. Handling mercury (a liquid metal which soaks into the skin quickly) will cause madness after long exposure.

Doormouse: A mad creature who takes tea all of the time because he lives in a state of frozen time. He also sleeps a lot.

Queen of Hearts: The mad tyrant who rules Wonderland. The Queen is best seen as an old person (an adult) who has lost sight of civility and so has become quite mad. In a sense, she is really an overgrown child who just happens to be old. The novel explains this by positioning her in opposition to Alice's youthful growth. As Alice is growing stronger and more reasonable, the Queen is degenerating into frailty and madness. As Alice becomes a fertile, red woman, the Queen wanes to become a pale, old matron.


King of Hearts:
The Queen's simpering husband.

Alice's Sister: A reasonable adult, Alice's older sister is the one who, in the end, recognizes Alice's own adult-like qualities. Carroll closes with her adult interpretation of Wonderland so as to reinforce the sense that Alice has truly grown emotionally.
PostPosted: Wed Sep 09, 2009 4:40 pm


Extra, maybe useless information

Food: Food is the used in this novel as a metaphor for growth. Carroll is literalizing the old notion that food helps you grow big and strong, that food is the path to adulthood. Ironically, Carroll is also pointing out that growing up is only half the way to adulthood. Alice can control her size and therefore her position as an adult with the food provided by the Caterpillar, but it isn't until the Cheshire Cat shows her the dangers of adulthood that she is able to be truly adult. Food can make you big in Wonderland (as in life) but only mercy and experience can make you wise.

Red: Red is the symbol of adulthood (literally it can be taken to refer to menstrual blood, and thus fertility and vigor). The Queen and Alice are on opposite sides of this color, Alice just growing into her adulthood, the Queen just growing past it. It is over this place, this wise middle ground, that the novel fights. Red is, hopefully, a place (or an age) of balance between rules and mercy, between young and old, between wisdom and nonsense.

Alice in Wonderland is a coming of age story. It is the growth of Alice from an undisciplined child to a wise young woman. The principle arrangement of this growth is two-parted. First Alice must learn that rules are essential to civil, adult life. Then she must learn that if rules are adhered to blindly, and without a merciful sense of justice, then society becomes worse than childish anarchy, it becomes a tyranny. These truths are played out in the metaphors of children's games and rhymes.

In the end, Alice must overcome the nonsense of the young and the old before she truly understands what adulthood is all about.

X Twilight Abyss X
Captain

7,750 Points
  • Hygienic 200
  • Signature Look 250
  • Forum Sophomore 300
Reply
Twisted« Horror Rolplay

 
Manage Your Items
Other Stuff
Get GCash
Offers
Get Items
More Items
Where Everyone Hangs Out
Other Community Areas
Virtual Spaces
Fun Stuff
Gaia's Games
Mini-Games
Play with GCash
Play with Platinum
//
//

// //

Have an account? Login Now!

//
//