Looking For Alice, Finding Carroll

Written by Aaman Lamba
Published February 16, 2005
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Behind the scenes at Parsons Thomson's, though, it was a different story. When he did not have an elaborate and interesting plan involving railway journeys, or a David and Goliath battle to fight, Dodgson obviously couldn't be bothered to notice how much was in his account from month to month. He began running into overdraft almost from the start. By the eighth transaction, his account was in the red, and he subsequently slid in and out of solvency in a careless way which was certainly not the rule among Parsons Thomson's other distinguished customers. Using a rough rule of thumb of £50 (modern) to £1 (Victorian), Dodgson's £148 overdraft in June 1863 was the approximate equivalent of £7,500 now, and that was fairly typical. For many years, these overdrafts were sufficiently low to be paid off as soon as he received his half-yearly salary from Christ Church. After Alice and his other books began producing income, the annual revenues, which quickly reached several hundred pounds a year, also helped his solvency.

The Looking Glass Company is currently enacting the world premiere of "Lookingglass Alice", a musical, in Chicago.


Lookingglass Alice


Adapted from Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass by Ensemble Member and Artistic Director David Catlin

Directed by David Catlin

Alice falls, floats, flies, and defies gravity and the rules of logic on her wonderland journey through the looking glass to become a queen.

With a juggling Mad Hatter, a precariously balancing Egg, and a bumbling Knight who invents his way into Alice's heart, Lookingglass Alice revisits the stories that inspired the founding of Lookingglass Theatre Company.

Muscular, acrobatic, percussive and dizzyingly playful, Lookingglass Alice is a show for all ages: adults who think they're all grown up, kids who wish they were, and everyone who likes to pretend they never have to.


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Aaman Lamba is a Blogcritics editor, as well as the Publisher of Desicritics.org, a Blogcritics network site covering media, politics, culture, sports and more with a global South Asian focus
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Looking For Alice, Finding Carroll
Published: February 16, 2005
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Section: Books
Filed Under: Books: Children, Books: Fantasy, Books: Humor, Books: SF, Culture: Arts
Writer: Aaman Lamba
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Comments

#1 — February 16, 2005 @ 12:56PM — Lono [URL]

Lewis Carroll rules! As someone with an Literature degree, it should carry at least a little weight when I say Alice in Wonderland (which is actually two books) is the best book ever written. It is timeless, and never fails to impress or entertain me.

#2 — February 16, 2005 @ 13:56PM — Aaman [URL]

The concern about Carroll's pedophilia is in line with our modern sensibilities, but his preferences were not out of place in his own times - when the (not yet) Bishop of Canterbury could propose to a twelve-year old, and nary a complaint.

Great author, indeed - and talented in many more fields

#3 — February 16, 2005 @ 15:42PM — Richard Porter

Does this mean that we should embrace Carroll, just as Hollywood has embraced J.M. Barrie, the creator of Peter Pan (Finding Neverland)?
This movie seems to have left out a major part of that author's life, namely his fascination with young boys.
By your accord, we should excuse Michael Jackson, Barrie and Carroll and anyone else because they are extremely talented, are geniuses or during their lifetime the world wasn't civilized enough to realize how morally wrong their lusts would lead them.
Praise the stories not the man.

#4 — February 16, 2005 @ 15:50PM — Aaman [URL]

Ah - I expected the comparisons - I did not excuse this element of his life. It may have been a motive force for his creativity, and was morally wrong. In fact, it was probably the main reason he did not take up the cloth, as it were. He knew he was tormented by these demons, unlike, say, Michael

The contradictions exist in these people's lives - do with them what you will.

#5 — February 17, 2005 @ 02:15AM — Lono [URL]

You are all losing track and making very serious accusations which I think are totally baseless. The Alice in the book was a real life girl, Alice Little. She was the daughter of a good friend who used to accompany them on picnics.

Sure Dodgeson (pen name Carrol) was a strange fellow with a great imagination... that doesn't make him a pedophile. If you are to use that same rule of them (that creators of children's art are all pedophiles), then eveyr single employee of the Disney corporation should be charged and hung.

#6 — February 19, 2005 @ 03:52AM — Mike [URL]

This discussion of Carroll as a pedophile is pretty out of date isn't it? The newest research shows that the whole image of his so-called 'obsession' with small girls was created almost entirely (and almost accidentally) by biographers and dreamers anyway.
See the 'Looking for Lewis Carroll' website which had the latest research from the best writers on Carroll

#7 — February 19, 2005 @ 12:52PM — Aaman [URL]

Thanks Mike - great website.

#8 — April 7, 2005 @ 09:55AM — Richard Astley-Clemas [URL]

Everythings been said about this tiresome subject and little of it made sense anyway by applying todays morals and politically correct thinking to what happenned well over a century ago.
No one seems to have realised that Dodgson/Carroll would have been impotent thus a threat to nobody

#9 — April 7, 2005 @ 12:34PM — DrPat [URL]

If impotence or virginity were a bar to pedophilia, Michael Jackson wouldn't be in the trouble he's in.

Whether or not Dodson (or Barrie, for that matter) ever consumated their lusts, that they experienced a sexual urge toward children is part of the historical background of these men.

#10 — April 7, 2005 @ 12:45PM — Shark

Just wanna add a suggestion:

Alice in Wonderland by Abelardo Morrell

Beautiful and brilliant, it belongs in every Alice fanatic's collection.

PS: re - alleged pedophilia -- get a life, morons.

xxoo
S

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