Thursday, May 30, 2019

Alices Adventures in Wonder Land, James and the Giant Peach Essay

Alices Adventures in Wonder Land, James and the Giant PeachAlices Adventures in Wonderland was written by Lewis Carroll in1865. It was written for children and is a story of a twelve year oldgirl who falls down a rabbit hole. On her adventures, the protagonist,Alice, comes crosswise some(prenominal) weird and wonderful scenes, sites andcharacters. She comes across many creatures and animals withanthropomorphic behaviour. The entire story is set in a strange worldof continuous change.James and the Giant Peach, written by Roald Dahl in 1965, is as well abook written for children. It is about a boy called James, who is alsothe protagonist and is also a similar age as Alice, and he comesacross a huge peach. This peach contains giant insects, which talk.There are several similarities between these two stories, includingthe fact that the protagonist is a child who goes through charming andstrange scenes that are packed with fantasy and wonder. Also, thecharacters that they meet along th eir way are, in both stories,creatures and animals who behave anthropomorphically.James is taken through many adventures and situations of big(p)excitement. He lives in and lives off the peach which he has becomestranded upon whilst floating at sea. Eventually, in the climax of thestory, the peach ends out flying everywhere New York City with the aid ofSeagulls. This is a modern childs story, and even with a centurybetween the publishing of James and Alice, the two stories areincredibly resembling in scene structure and character relevance.In both stories there are wonderful but bizarre characters thatinfluence the story and how it develops. In Alice, a strong influenceof the story is the Cheshire Cat. Using riddles a... ...er influence, I have come to the conclusion thatAlices Adventures in Wonderland simply isnt as enjoyed bychildren as it used to be. It is also out of the ordinary and merelyunbelievable. Fantasy works with the imagination, but this story isjust too fantastic al. The introduction of the animated film has alsodiscouraged children from narration the book, because not as much efforthas to be put in just to understand whats happening. This is the casewith modern stories as well. For example, the Harry Potter stories arereleased as films as well as in books, yet many children still enjoyand are inspired to depict the books as well as watching the films.Basically Alices Adventures in Wonderland has passed its time, andin the modern day requires too much concentrating, hard work and deepthought to be enjoyed. Easily read stories, are easily enjoyed.

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