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Lewis Carroll

Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (/ˈlʌtwɪ ˈdɒsən/ LUT-wij DOJ-sən; 27 January 1832 – 14 January 1898), better known by his pen name Lewis Carroll, was an English author, poet, mathematician and photographer. His most notable works are Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and its sequel Through the Looking-Glass (1871). He was noted for his facility with word play, logic, and fantasy. His poems Jabberwocky (1871) and The Hunting of the Snark (1876) are classified in the genre of literary nonsense.

Lewis Carroll
Carroll in June 1857
BornCharles Lutwidge Dodgson
(1832-01-27)27 January 1832
Daresbury, Cheshire, England
Died14 January 1898(1898-01-14) (aged 65)
Guildford, Surrey, England
Resting placeMount Cemetery, Guildford, Surrey, England
Occupation
  • Author
  • illustrator
  • poet
  • mathematician
  • photographer
  • teacher
  • inventor
Education
Genre
ParentsCharles Dodgson (father)
Relatives
Signature

Carroll came from a family of high-church Anglicans, and developed a long relationship with Christ Church, Oxford, where he lived for most of his life as a scholar and teacher. Alice Liddell – a daughter of Henry Liddell, the Dean of Christ Church – is widely identified as the original inspiration for Alice in Wonderland, though Carroll always denied this.

An avid puzzler, Carroll created the word ladder puzzle (which he then called "Doublets"), which he published in his weekly column for Vanity Fair magazine between 1879 and 1881. In 1982 a memorial stone to Carroll was unveiled at Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey. There are societies in many parts of the world dedicated to the enjoyment and promotion of his works.[1][2]

Early life edit

Dodgson's family was predominantly northern English, conservative, and high-church Anglican. Most of his male ancestors were army officers or Anglican clergymen. His great-grandfather, Charles Dodgson, had risen through the ranks of the church to become the Bishop of Elphin in rural Ireland.[3] His paternal grandfather, another Charles, had been an army captain, killed in action in Ireland in 1803, when his two sons were hardly more than babies.[4] The older of these sons, yet another Charles Dodgson, was Carroll's father. He went to Westminster School and then to Christ Church, Oxford.[5] He reverted to the other family tradition and took holy orders. He was mathematically gifted and won a double first degree, which could have been the prelude to a brilliant academic career. Instead, he married his first cousin Frances Jane Lutwidge in 1830 and became a country parson.[6][7]

Dodgson was born on 27 January 1832 at All Saints' Vicarage in Daresbury, Cheshire,[8] the oldest boy and the third oldest of 11 children. When he was 11, his father was given the living of Croft-on-Tees, Yorkshire, and the whole family moved to the spacious rectory. This remained their home for the next 25 years. Charles' father was an active and highly conservative cleric of the Church of England who later became the Archdeacon of Richmond[9] and involved himself, sometimes influentially, in the intense religious disputes that were dividing the church. He was high-church, inclining toward Anglo-Catholicism, an admirer of John Henry Newman and the Tractarian movement, and did his best to instil such views in his children. However, Charles developed an ambivalent relationship with his father's values and with the Church of England as a whole.[10]

During his early youth, Dodgson was educated at home. His "reading lists" preserved in the family archives testify to a precocious intellect: at the age of seven, he was reading books such as The Pilgrim's Progress. He also spoke with a stammer – a condition shared by most of his siblings[11] – that often inhibited his social life throughout his years. At the age of twelve he was sent to Richmond Grammar School (now part of Richmond School) in Richmond, North Yorkshire.

 
Lewis Carroll self-portrait c. 1856, aged 24 at that time

In 1846, Dodgson entered Rugby School, where he was evidently unhappy, as he wrote some years after leaving: "I cannot say ... that any earthly considerations would induce me to go through my three years again ... I can honestly say that if I could have been ... secure from annoyance at night, the hardships of the daily life would have been comparative trifles to bear."[12] He did not claim he suffered from bullying, but cited little boys as the main targets of older bullies at Rugby.[13] Stuart Dodgson Collingwood, Dodgson's nephew, wrote that "even though it is hard for those who have only known him as the gentle and retiring don to believe it, it is nevertheless true that long after he left school, his name was remembered as that of a boy who knew well how to use his fists in defence of a righteous cause", which is the protection of the smaller boys.[13]

Scholastically, though, he excelled with apparent ease. "I have not had a more promising boy at his age since I came to Rugby", observed mathematics master R. B. Mayor.[14] Francis Walkingame's The Tutor's Assistant; Being a Compendium of Arithmetic – the mathematics textbook that the young Dodgson used – still survives and it contained an inscription in Latin, which translates to: "This book belongs to Charles Lutwidge Dodgson: hands off!"[15] Some pages also included annotations such as the one found on p. 129, where he wrote "Not a fair question in decimals" next to a question.[16]

He left Rugby at the end of 1849 and matriculated at the University of Oxford in May 1850 as a member of his father's old college, Christ Church.[17] After waiting for rooms in college to become available, he went into residence in January 1851.[18] He had been at Oxford only two days when he received a summons home. His mother had died of "inflammation of the brain" – perhaps meningitis or a stroke – at the age of 47.[18]

His early academic career veered between high promise and irresistible distraction. He did not always work hard, but was exceptionally gifted, and achievement came easily to him. In 1852, he obtained first-class honours in Mathematics Moderations and was soon afterwards nominated to a Studentship by his father's old friend Canon Edward Pusey.[19][20] In 1854, he obtained first-class honours in the Final Honours School of Mathematics, standing first on the list, and thus graduated as Bachelor of Arts.[21][22] He remained at Christ Church studying and teaching, but the next year he failed an important scholarship exam through his self-confessed inability to apply himself to study.[23][24] Even so, his talent as a mathematician won him the Christ Church Mathematical Lectureship in 1855,[25] which he continued to hold for the next 26 years.[26] Despite early unhappiness, Dodgson remained at Christ Church, in various capacities, until his death, including that of Sub-Librarian of the Christ Church library, where his office was close to the Deanery, where Alice Liddell lived.[27]

Character and appearance edit

Health problems edit

 
1863 photograph of Carroll by Oscar G. Rejlander

The young adult Charles Dodgson was about 6 feet (1.83 m) tall and slender, and he had curly brown hair and blue or grey eyes (depending on the account). He was described in later life as somewhat asymmetrical, and as carrying himself rather stiffly and awkwardly, although this might be on account of a knee injury sustained in middle age. As a very young child, he suffered a fever that left him deaf in one ear. At the age of 17, he suffered a severe attack of whooping cough, which was probably responsible for his chronically weak chest in later life. In early childhood, he acquired a stammer, which he referred to as his "hesitation"; it remained throughout his life.[27]

The stammer has always been a significant part of the image of Dodgson. While one apocryphal story says that he stammered only in adult company and was free and fluent with children, there is no evidence to support this idea.[28] Many children of his acquaintance remembered the stammer, while many adults failed to notice it. Dodgson himself seems to have been far more acutely aware of it than most people whom he met; it is said that he caricatured himself as the Dodo in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, referring to his difficulty in pronouncing his last name, but this is one of the many supposed facts often repeated for which no first-hand evidence remains. He did indeed refer to himself as a dodo, but whether or not this reference was to his stammer is simply speculation.[27]

Dodgson's stammer did trouble him, but it was never so debilitating that it prevented him from applying his other personal qualities to do well in society. He lived in a time when people commonly devised their own amusements and when singing and recitation were required social skills, and the young Dodgson was well equipped to be an engaging entertainer. He could reportedly sing at a passable level and was not afraid to do so before an audience. He was also adept at mimicry and storytelling, and reputedly quite good at charades.[27]

Social connections edit

In the interim between his early published writings and the success of the Alice books, Dodgson began to move in the pre-Raphaelite social circle. He first met John Ruskin in 1857 and became friendly with him. Around 1863, he developed a close relationship with Dante Gabriel Rossetti and his family. He would often take pictures of the family in the garden of the Rossetti's house in Chelsea, London. He also knew William Holman Hunt, John Everett Millais, and Arthur Hughes, among other artists. He knew fairy-tale author George MacDonald well – it was the enthusiastic reception of Alice by the young MacDonald children that persuaded him to submit the work for publication.[27][29]

Politics, religion, and philosophy edit

In broad terms, Dodgson has traditionally been regarded as politically, religiously, and personally conservative. Martin Gardner labels Dodgson as a Tory who was "awed by lords and inclined to be snobbish towards inferiors".[30] William Tuckwell, in his Reminiscences of Oxford (1900), regarded him as "austere, shy, precise, absorbed in mathematical reverie, watchfully tenacious of his dignity, stiffly conservative in political, theological, social theory, his life mapped out in squares like Alice's landscape".[31] Dodgson was ordained a deacon in the Church of England on 22 December 1861. In The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll, the editor states that "his Diary is full of such modest depreciations of himself and his work, interspersed with earnest prayers (too sacred and private to be reproduced here) that God would forgive him the past, and help him to perform His holy will in the future."[32] When a friend asked him about his religious views, Dodgson wrote in response that he was a member of the Church of England, but "doubt[ed] if he was fully a 'High Churchman'". He added:

I believe that when you and I come to lie down for the last time, if only we can keep firm hold of the great truths Christ taught us—our own utter worthlessness and His infinite worth; and that He has brought us back to our one Father, and made us His brethren, and so brethren to one another—we shall have all we need to guide us through the shadows. Most assuredly I accept to the full the doctrines you refer to—that Christ died to save us, that we have no other way of salvation open to us but through His death, and that it is by faith in Him, and through no merit of ours, that we are reconciled to God; and most assuredly I can cordially say, "I owe all to Him who loved me, and died on the Cross of Calvary."

— Carroll (1897)[33]

Dodgson also expressed interest in other fields. He was an early member of the Society for Psychical Research, and one of his letters suggests that he accepted as real what was then called "thought reading".[34] Dodgson wrote some studies of various philosophical arguments. In 1895, he developed a philosophical regressus-argument on deductive reasoning in his article "What the Tortoise Said to Achilles", which appeared in one of the early volumes of Mind.[35] The article was reprinted in the same journal a hundred years later in 1995, with a subsequent article by Simon Blackburn titled "Practical Tortoise Raising".[36]

Artistic activities edit

 
One of Carroll's own illustrations

Literature edit

From a young age, Dodgson wrote poetry and short stories, contributing heavily to the family magazine Mischmasch and later sending them to various magazines, enjoying moderate success. Between 1854 and 1856, his work appeared in the national publications The Comic Times and The Train, as well as smaller magazines such as the Whitby Gazette and the Oxford Critic. Most of this output was humorous, sometimes satirical, but his standards and ambitions were exacting. "I do not think I have yet written anything worthy of real publication (in which I do not include the Whitby Gazette or the Oxonian Advertiser), but I do not despair of doing so someday," he wrote in July 1855.[27] Sometime after 1850, he did write puppet plays for his siblings' entertainment, of which one has survived: La Guida di Bragia.[37]

In March 1856, he published his first piece of work under the name that would make him famous. A romantic poem called "Solitude" appeared in The Train under the authorship of "Lewis Carroll". This pseudonym was a play on his real name: Lewis was the anglicised form of Ludovicus, which was the Latin for Lutwidge, and Carroll an Irish surname similar to the Latin name Carolus, from which comes the name Charles.[7] The transition went as follows: "Charles Lutwidge" translated into Latin as "Carolus Ludovicus". This was then translated back into English as "Carroll Lewis" and then reversed to make "Lewis Carroll".[38] This pseudonym was chosen by editor Edmund Yates from a list of four submitted by Dodgson, the others being Edgar Cuthwellis, Edgar U. C. Westhill, and Louis Carroll.[39]

Alice books edit

 
"The chief difficulty Alice found at first was in managing her flamingo". Illustration by John Tenniel, 1865.
 
The Jabberwock, as illustrated by John Tenniel for Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking-Glass, including the poem "Jabberwocky".

In 1856, Dean Henry Liddell arrived at Christ Church, bringing with him his young family, all of whom would figure largely in Dodgson's life over the following years, and would greatly influence his writing career. Dodgson became close friends with Liddell's wife Lorina and their children, particularly the three sisters Lorina, Edith, and Alice Liddell. He was widely assumed for many years to have derived his own "Alice" from Alice Liddell; the acrostic poem at the end of Through the Looking-Glass spells out her name in full, and there are also many superficial references to her hidden in the text of both books. It has been noted that Dodgson himself repeatedly denied in later life that his "little heroine" was based on any real child,[40][41] and he frequently dedicated his works to girls of his acquaintance, adding their names in acrostic poems at the beginning of the text. Gertrude Chataway's name appears in this form at the beginning of The Hunting of the Snark, and it is not suggested that this means that any of the characters in the narrative are based on her.[41]

Information is scarce (Dodgson's diaries for the years 1858–1862 are missing), but it seems clear that his friendship with the Liddell family was an important part of his life in the late 1850s, and he grew into the habit of taking the children on rowing trips (first the boy, Harry, and later the three girls) accompanied by an adult friend[42] to nearby Nuneham Courtenay or Godstow.[43]

It was on one such expedition on 4 July 1862 that Dodgson invented the outline of the story that eventually became his first and greatest commercial success. He told the story to Alice Liddell and she begged him to write it down, and Dodgson eventually (after much delay) presented her with a handwritten, illustrated manuscript entitled Alice's Adventures Under Ground in November 1864.[43]

Before this, the family of friend and mentor George MacDonald read Dodgson's incomplete manuscript, and the enthusiasm of the MacDonald children encouraged Dodgson to seek publication. In 1863, he had taken the unfinished manuscript to Macmillan the publisher, who liked it immediately. After the possible alternative titles were rejected – Alice Among the Fairies and Alice's Golden Hour – the work was finally published as Alice's Adventures in Wonderland in 1865 under the Lewis Carroll pen-name, which Dodgson had first used some nine years earlier.[29] The illustrations this time were by Sir John Tenniel; Dodgson evidently thought that a published book would need the skills of a professional artist. Annotated versions provide insights into many of the ideas and hidden meanings that are prevalent in these books.[44][45] Critical literature has often proposed Freudian interpretations of the book as "a descent into the dark world of the subconscious", as well as seeing it as a satire upon contemporary mathematical advances.[46][47]

The overwhelming commercial success of the first Alice book changed Dodgson's life in many ways.[48][49][50] The fame of his alter ego "Lewis Carroll" soon spread around the world. He was inundated with fan mail and with sometimes unwanted attention. Indeed, according to one popular story, Queen Victoria herself enjoyed Alice in Wonderland so much that she commanded that he dedicate his next book to her, and was accordingly presented with his next work, a scholarly mathematical volume entitled An Elementary Treatise on Determinants.[51][52] Dodgson himself vehemently denied this story, commenting "... It is utterly false in every particular: nothing even resembling it has occurred";[52][53] and it is unlikely for other reasons. As T. B. Strong comments in a Times article, "It would have been clean contrary to all his practice to identify [the] author of Alice with the author of his mathematical works".[54][55] He also began earning quite substantial sums of money but continued with his seemingly disliked post at Christ Church.[29]

Late in 1871, he published the sequel Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There. (The title page of the first edition erroneously gives "1872" as the date of publication.[56]) Its somewhat darker mood possibly reflects changes in Dodgson's life. His father's death in 1868 plunged him into a depression that lasted some years.[29]

The Hunting of the Snark edit

In 1876, Dodgson produced his next great work, The Hunting of the Snark, a fantastical "nonsense" poem, with illustrations by Henry Holiday, exploring the adventures of a bizarre crew of nine tradesmen and one beaver, who set off to find the snark. It received largely mixed reviews from Carroll's contemporary reviewers,[57] but was enormously popular with the public, having been reprinted seventeen times between 1876 and 1908,[58] and has seen various adaptations into musicals, opera, theatre, plays and music.[59] Painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti reputedly became convinced that the poem was about him.[29]

Sylvie and Bruno edit

In 1895, 30 years after the publication of his masterpieces, Carroll attempted a comeback, producing a two-volume tale of the fairy siblings Sylvie and Bruno. Carroll entwines two plots set in two alternative worlds, one set in rural England and the other in the fairytale kingdoms of Elfland, Outland, and others. The fairytale world satirizes English society, and more specifically the world of academia. Sylvie and Bruno came out in two volumes and is considered a lesser work, although it has remained in print for over a century.

Photography (1856–1880) edit

 
Photo of Alice Liddell taken by Lewis Carroll (1858)

In 1856, Dodgson took up the new art form of photography under the influence first of his uncle Skeffington Lutwidge, and later of his Oxford friend Reginald Southey.[60] He soon excelled at the art and became a well-known gentleman-photographer, and he seems even to have toyed with the idea of making a living out of it in his very early years.[29]

A study by Roger Taylor and Edward Wakeling exhaustively lists every surviving print, and Taylor calculates that just over half of his surviving work depicts young girls, though about 60% of his original photographic portfolio is now missing.[61] Dodgson also made many studies of men, women, boys, and landscapes; his subjects also include skeletons, dolls, dogs, statues, paintings, and trees.[62] His pictures of children were taken with a parent in attendance and many of the pictures were taken in the Liddell garden because natural sunlight was required for good exposures.[42]

 
The Rossetti Family, by Lewis Carroll (1863). L-R: Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Christina Rossetti, Frances Polidori and William Michael Rossetti

He also found photography to be a useful entrée into higher social circles.[63] During the most productive part of his career, he made portraits of notable sitters such as John Everett Millais, Ellen Terry, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Julia Margaret Cameron, Michael Faraday, Lord Salisbury, and Alfred Tennyson.[29]

By the time that Dodgson abruptly ceased photography (1880, after 24 years), he had established his own studio on the roof of Tom Quad, created around 3,000 images, and become an amateur master of the medium, though fewer than 1,000 images have survived time and deliberate destruction. He stopped taking photographs because keeping his studio working was too time-consuming.[64] He used the wet collodion process; commercial photographers who started using the dry-plate process in the 1870s took pictures more quickly.[65] Popular taste changed with the advent of Modernism, affecting the types of photographs that he produced.

Inventions edit

To promote letter writing, Dodgson invented "The Wonderland Postage-Stamp Case" in 1889. This was a cloth-backed folder with twelve slots, two marked for inserting the most commonly used penny stamp, and one each for the other current denominations up to one shilling. The folder was then put into a slipcase decorated with a picture of Alice on the front and the Cheshire Cat on the back. It intended to organize stamps wherever one stored their writing implements; Carroll expressly notes in Eight or Nine Wise Words about Letter-Writing it is not intended to be carried in a pocket or purse, as the most common individual stamps could easily be carried on their own. The pack included a copy of a pamphlet version of this lecture.[66][67]

 
Reconstructed nyctograph, with scale demonstrated by a 5 euro cent.

Another invention was a writing tablet called the nyctograph that allowed note-taking in the dark, thus eliminating the need to get out of bed and strike a light when one woke with an idea. The device consisted of a gridded card with sixteen squares and a system of symbols representing an alphabet of Dodgson's design, using letter shapes similar to the Graffiti writing system on a Palm device.[68]

He also devised a number of games, including an early version of what today is known as Scrabble. Devised some time in 1878, he invented the "doublet" (see word ladder), a form of brain-teaser that is still popular today, changing one word into another by altering one letter at a time, each successive change always resulting in a genuine word.[69] For instance, CAT is transformed into DOG by the following steps: CAT, COT, DOT, DOG.[29] It first appeared in the 29 March 1879 issue of Vanity Fair, with Carroll writing a weekly column for the magazine for two years; the final column dated 9 April 1881.[70] The games and puzzles of Lewis Carroll were the subject of Martin Gardner's March 1960 Mathematical Games column in Scientific American.

Other items include a rule for finding the day of the week for any date; a means for justifying right margins on a typewriter; a steering device for a velociman (a type of tricycle); fairer elimination rules for tennis tournaments; a new sort of postal money order; rules for reckoning postage; rules for a win in betting; rules for dividing a number by various divisors; a cardboard scale for the Senior Common Room at Christ Church which, held next to a glass, ensured the right amount of liqueur for the price paid; a double-sided adhesive strip to fasten envelopes or mount things in books; a device for helping a bedridden invalid to read from a book placed sideways; and at least two ciphers for cryptography.[29]

He also proposed alternative systems of parliamentary representation. He proposed the so-called Dodgson's method, using the Condorcet method.[71] In 1884, he proposed a proportional representation system based on multi-member districts, each voter casting only a single vote, quotas as minimum requirements to take seats, and votes transferable by candidates through what is now called Liquid democracy.[72]

Mathematical work edit

 
A posthumous portrait of Lewis Carroll by Hubert von Herkomer, based on photographs. This painting now hangs in the Great Hall of Christ Church, Oxford.

Within the academic discipline of mathematics, Dodgson worked primarily in the fields of geometry, linear and matrix algebra, mathematical logic, and recreational mathematics, producing nearly a dozen books under his real name. Dodgson also developed new ideas in linear algebra (e.g., the first printed proof of the Rouché–Capelli theorem),[73][74] probability, and the study of elections (e.g., Dodgson's method) and committees; some of this work was not published until well after his death. His occupation as Mathematical Lecturer at Christ Church gave him some financial security.[75]

Mathematical logic edit

His work in the field of mathematical logic attracted renewed interest in the late 20th century. Martin Gardner's book on logic machines and diagrams and William Warren Bartley's posthumous publication of the second part of Dodgson's symbolic logic book have sparked a reevaluation of Dodgson's contributions to symbolic logic.[76][77][78] It is recognized that in his Symbolic Logic Part II, Dodgson introduced the Method of Trees, the earliest modern use of a truth tree.[79]

Algebra edit

Robbins' and Rumsey's investigation[80] of Dodgson condensation, a method of evaluating determinants, led them to the alternating sign matrix conjecture, now a theorem.

Recreational mathematics edit

The discovery in the 1990s of additional ciphers that Dodgson had constructed, in addition to his "Memoria Technica", showed that he had employed sophisticated mathematical ideas in their creation.[81]

Correspondence edit

Dodgson wrote and received as many as 98,721 letters, according to a special letter register which he devised. He documented his advice about how to write more satisfying letters in a missive entitled "Eight or Nine Wise Words about Letter-Writing", published in 1890.[82]

Later years edit

 
Lewis Carroll in later life

Dodgson's existence remained little changed over the last twenty years of his life, despite his growing wealth and fame. He continued to teach at Christ Church until 1881 and remained in residence there until his death. Public appearances included attending the West End musical Alice in Wonderland (the first major live production of his Alice books) at the Prince of Wales Theatre on 30 December 1886.[83] The two volumes of his last novel, Sylvie and Bruno, were published in 1889 and 1893, but the intricacy of this work was apparently not appreciated by contemporary readers; it achieved nothing like the success of the Alice books, with disappointing reviews and sales of only 13,000 copies.[84][85]

The only known occasion on which he travelled abroad was a trip to Russia in 1867 as an ecclesiastic, together with the Reverend Henry Liddon. He recounts the travel in his "Russian Journal", which was first commercially published in 1935.[86] On his way to Russia and back, he also saw different cities in Belgium, Germany, partitioned Poland, and France.

In his early sixties, Dodgson increasingly suffered from synovitis which eventually prevented him walking and sometimes left him bed-ridden for months.[87]

Death edit

 
The grave of Lewis Carroll at the Mount Cemetery in Guildford

Dodgson died of pneumonia following influenza on 14 January 1898 at his sisters' home, "The Chestnuts", in Guildford in the county of Surrey, just four days before the death of Henry Liddell. He was two weeks away from turning 66 years old. His funeral was held at the nearby St Mary's Church.[88] His body was buried at the Mount Cemetery in Guildford.[29]

He is commemorated at All Saints' Church, Daresbury, in its stained glass windows depicting characters from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, erected in 1935[89]

Controversies and mysteries edit

Sexuality edit

Some late twentieth-century biographers have suggested that Dodgson's interest in children had an erotic element, including Morton N. Cohen in his Lewis Carroll: A Biography (1995),[90] Donald Thomas in his Lewis Carroll: A Portrait with Background (1995), and Michael Bakewell in his Lewis Carroll: A Biography (1996). Cohen, in particular, speculates that Dodgson's "sexual energies sought unconventional outlets", and further writes:

We cannot know to what extent sexual urges lay behind Charles's preference for drawing and photographing children in the nude. He contended the preference was entirely aesthetic. But given his emotional attachment to children as well as his aesthetic appreciation of their forms, his assertion that his interest was strictly artistic is naïve. He probably felt more than he dared acknowledge, even to himself.[91]

 
Lewis Carroll portrait of Beatrice Hatch

Cohen goes on to note that Dodgson "apparently convinced many of his friends that his attachment to the nude female child form was free of any eroticism", but adds that "later generations look beneath the surface" (p. 229). He argues that Dodgson may have wanted to marry the 11-year-old Alice Liddell and that this was the cause of the unexplained "break" with the family in June 1863,[29] an event for which other explanations are offered. Biographers Derek Hudson and Roger Lancelyn Green stop short of identifying Dodgson as a paedophile (Green also edited Dodgson's diaries and papers), but they concur that he had a passion for small female children and next to no interest in the adult world.[citation needed] Catherine Robson refers to Carroll as "the Victorian era's most famous (or infamous) girl lover".[92]

Several other writers and scholars have challenged the evidential basis for Cohen's and others' views about Dodgson's sexual interests. Hugues Lebailly has endeavoured to set Dodgson's child photography within the "Victorian Child Cult", which perceived child nudity as essentially an expression of innocence.[93] Lebailly claims that studies of child nudes were mainstream and fashionable in Dodgson's time and that most photographers made them as a matter of course, including Oscar Gustave Rejlander and Julia Margaret Cameron. Lebailly continues that child nudes even appeared on Victorian Christmas cards, implying a very different social and aesthetic assessment of such material. Lebailly concludes that it has been an error of Dodgson's biographers to view his child-photography with 20th- or 21st-century eyes, and to have presented it as some form of personal idiosyncrasy, when it was a response to a prevalent aesthetic and philosophical movement of the time.

Karoline Leach's reappraisal of Dodgson focused in particular on his controversial sexuality. She argues that the allegations of paedophilia rose initially from a misunderstanding of Victorian morals, as well as the mistaken idea – fostered by Dodgson's various biographers – that he had no interest in adult women. She termed the traditional image of Dodgson "the Carroll Myth". She drew attention to the large amounts of evidence in his diaries and letters that he was also keenly interested in adult women, married and single, and enjoyed several relationships with them that would have been considered scandalous by the social standards of his time. She also pointed to the fact that many of those whom he described as "child-friends" were girls in their late teens and even twenties.[94] She argues that suggestions of paedophilia emerged only many years after his death, when his well-meaning family had suppressed all evidence of his relationships with women in an effort to preserve his reputation, thus giving a false impression of a man interested only in little girls. Similarly, Leach points to a 1932 biography by Langford Reed as the source of the dubious claim that many of Carroll's female friendships ended when the girls reached the age of 14.[95]

In addition to the biographical works that have discussed Dodgson's sexuality, there are modern artistic interpretations of his life and work that do so as well – in particular, Dennis Potter in his play Alice and his screenplay for the motion picture Dreamchild, and Robert Wilson in his musical Alice.

Ordination edit

Dodgson had been groomed for the ordained ministry in the Church of England from a very early age and was expected to be ordained within four years of obtaining his master's degree, as a condition of his residency at Christ Church. He delayed the process for some time but was eventually ordained as a deacon on 22 December 1861 but when the time came a year later to be ordained as a priest, Dodgson appealed to the dean for permission not to proceed. This was against college rules and, initially, Dean Liddell told him that he would have to consult the college ruling body, which would almost certainly have resulted in his being expelled. For unknown reasons, Liddell changed his mind overnight and permitted him to remain at the college in defiance of the rules.[96] Dodgson never became a priest, unique amongst senior students of his time.[citation needed]

There is currently no conclusive evidence about why Dodgson rejected the priesthood. Some have suggested that his stammer made him reluctant to take the step because he was afraid of having to preach.[97] Wilson quotes letters by Dodgson describing difficulty in reading lessons and prayers rather than preaching in his own words.[98] although Dodgson did indeed preach in later life, even though not in priest's orders, so it seems unlikely that his impediment was a major factor affecting his choice.[citation needed] Wilson also points out that the Bishop of Oxford, Samuel Wilberforce, who ordained Dodgson, had strong views against clergy going to the theatre, one of Dodgson's great interests. He was interested in minority forms of Christianity (he was an admirer of F. D. Maurice) and "alternative" religions (theosophy).[99] Dodgson became deeply troubled by an unexplained sense of sin and guilt at this time (the early 1860s) and frequently expressed the view in his diaries that he was a "vile and worthless" sinner, unworthy of the priesthood and this sense of sin and unworthiness may well have affected his decision to abandon being ordained to the priesthood.[100]

Missing diaries edit

At least four complete volumes and around seven pages of text are missing from Dodgson's 13 diaries.[101] The loss of the volumes remains unexplained; the pages have been removed by an unknown hand. Most scholars assume that the diary material was removed by family members in the interests of preserving the family name, but this has not been proven.[102] Except for one page, material is missing from his diaries for the period between 1853 and 1863 (when Dodgson was 21–31 years old).[103][104] During this period, Dodgson began experiencing great mental and spiritual anguish and confessing to an overwhelming sense of his own sin. This was also the period of time when he composed his extensive love poetry, leading to speculation that the poems were autobiographical.[105][106]

Many theories have been put forward to explain the missing material. A popular explanation for one missing page (27 June 1863) is that it might have been torn out to conceal a proposal of marriage on that day by Dodgson to the 11-year-old Alice Liddell. However, there has never been any evidence to suggest this, and a paper suggests evidence to the contrary which was discovered by Karoline Leach in the Dodgson family archive in 1996.[107][better source needed]

 
The "cut pages in diary" document, in the Dodgson family archive in Woking

This paper is known as the "cut pages in diary" document. Carroll's nephew Philip Dodgson Jacques reports that he wrote it well after Carroll's death, based on information from his aunts, who destroyed two diary pages, including the one for 27 June 1863. Jacques did not see the pages himself.[108] The summary for 27 June states that Mrs. Liddell told Dodgson there was gossip circulating about him and the Liddell family's governess, as well as about his relationship with "Ina", presumably Alice's older sister Lorina Liddell. The "break" with the Liddell family that occurred soon after was presumably in response to this gossip.[109][107] Without evidence, Leach suggests an alternative interpretation; Lorina was also the name of Alice Liddell's mother. What is deemed most crucial and surprising is the document seems to imply that Dodgson's break with the family was not connected with Alice at all. Until a primary source is discovered, the events of 27 June 1863 will remain in doubt; however, a 1930 letter from the younger Lorina Liddell to Alice may shed light on the matter. Reporting an interview with an early Dodgson biographer, she wrote:

I said his manner became too affectionate to you as you grew older, and that mother spoke to him about it, and that offended him so he ceased coming to visit us again – as one had to find some reason for all intercourse ceasing . . . Mr. D used to take you on his knee . . . I did not say that.[110]

Migraine and epilepsy edit

In his diary for 1880, Dodgson recorded experiencing his first episode of migraine with aura, describing very accurately the process of "moving fortifications" that are a manifestation of the aura stage of the syndrome.[111] There is no clear evidence to show whether this was his first experience of migraine per se or he previously had the far more common form of migraine without aura, although the latter seems most likely, given the fact that migraine most commonly develops in the teens or early adulthood. Another form of migraine aura called Alice in Wonderland syndrome has been named after Dodgson's book of the same name and its titular character because its manifestation can resemble the sudden size-changes in the book. It is also known as micropsia and macropsia, a brain condition affecting the way that objects are perceived by the mind. For example, an affected person may look at a larger object such as a basketball and perceive it as having the size of a golf ball. Some authors have suggested that Dodgson experienced this type of aura and used it as an inspiration in his work, but there is no evidence that he did.[112][113]

Dodgson also had two attacks in which he lost consciousness. He was diagnosed by a Dr. Morshead, Dr. Brooks, and Dr. Stedman, and they believed the attack and a consequent attack to be an "epileptiform" seizure (initially thought to be fainting, but Brooks changed his mind). Some have concluded from this that he had this condition for his entire life, but there is no evidence of this in his diaries beyond the diagnosis of the two attacks already mentioned.[111] Some authors, Sadi Ranson in particular, have suggested that Carroll had temporal lobe epilepsy in which consciousness is not always completely lost but altered, and in which the symptoms mimic many of the same experiences as Alice in Wonderland. Carroll had at least one incident in which he suffered full loss of consciousness and awoke with a bloody nose, which he recorded in his diary and noted that the episode left him not feeling himself for "quite sometime afterward". This attack was diagnosed as possibly "epileptiform" and Carroll himself later wrote of his "seizures" in the same diary.

Most of the standard diagnostic tests of today were not available in the nineteenth century. Yvonne Hart, consultant neurologist at the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, considered Dodgson's symptoms. Her conclusion, quoted in Jenny Woolf's 2010 The Mystery of Lewis Carroll, is that Dodgson very likely had migraine and may have had epilepsy, but she emphasises that she would have considerable doubt about making a diagnosis of epilepsy without further information.[114]

Legacy edit

 
Lewis Carroll memorial window (Mad Hatter, Dormouse and March Hare pictured) at All Saints' Church, Daresbury, Cheshire

There are societies in many parts of the world dedicated to the enjoyment and promotion of his works and the investigation of his life.[115]

Copenhagen Street in Islington, north London is the location of the Lewis Carroll Children's Library.[116]

In 1982, his great-nephew unveiled a memorial stone to him in Poets' Corner, Westminster Abbey.[117] In January 1994, an asteroid, 6984 Lewiscarroll, was discovered and named after Carroll. The Lewis Carroll Centenary Wood near his birthplace in Daresbury opened in 2000.[118]

As Carroll was born in All Saints' Vicarage, he is commemorated at All Saints' Church, Daresbury by stained glass windows depicting characters from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. The Lewis Carroll Centre, attached to the church, was opened in March 2012.[119]

Works edit

Literary works edit

Mathematical works edit

  • A Syllabus of Plane Algebraic Geometry (1860)
  • The Fifth Book of Euclid Treated Algebraically (1858 and 1868)
  • An Elementary Treatise on Determinants, With Their Application to Simultaneous Linear Equations and Algebraic Equations
  • Euclid and his Modern Rivals (1879), both literary and mathematical in style
  • Symbolic Logic Part I
  • Symbolic Logic Part II (published posthumously)
  • The Alphabet Cipher (1868)
  • The Game of Logic (1887)
  • Curiosa Mathematica I (1888)
  • Curiosa Mathematica II (1892)
  • A discussion of the various methods of procedure in conducting elections (1873), Suggestions as to the best method of taking votes, where more than two issues are to be voted on (1874), A method of taking votes on more than two issues (1876), collected as The Theory of Committees and Elections, edited, analysed, and published in 1958 by Duncan Black

Other works edit

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Lewis Carroll Society of North America Inc. 26 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine Charity Navigator. Retrieved 7 October
  3. ^ Clark, p. 10
  4. ^ Collingwood, pp. 6–7
  5. ^ Bakewell, Michael (1996). Lewis Carroll: A Biography. London: Heinemann. p. 2. ISBN 9780434045792.
  6. ^ Collingwood, p. 8
  7. ^ a b Cohen, pp. 30–35
  8. ^ McCulloch, Fiona (2006). "Lewis Carroll". In Kastan, David Scott (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of British Literature. Vol. 3: Harr—Mirr. Oxford, U.K.: Oxford University Press. p. 386. ISBN 9780195169218.
  9. ^ "Charles Lutwidge Dodgson". The MacTutor History of Mathematics archive. from the original on 5 July 2011. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  10. ^ Cohen, pp. 200–202
  11. ^ Cohen, p. 4
  12. ^ Collingwood, pp. 30–31
  13. ^ a b Woolf, Jenny (2010). The Mystery of Lewis Carroll: Discovering the Whimsical, Thoughtful, and Sometimes Lonely Man Who Created "Alice in Wonderland". New York: St. Martin's Press. pp. 24. ISBN 9780312612986.
  14. ^ Collingwood, p. 29
  15. ^ Carroll, Lewis (1995). Wakeling, Edward (ed.). Rediscovered Lewis Carroll Puzzles. New York City: Dover Publications. pp. 13. ISBN 0486288617.
  16. ^ Lovett, Charlie (2005). Lewis Carroll Among His Books: A Descriptive Catalogue of the Private Library of Charles L. Dodgson. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. p. 329. ISBN 0786421053.
  17. ^ Clark, pp. 63–64
  18. ^ a b Clark, pp. 64–65
  19. ^ Collingwood, p. 52
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  21. ^ Collingwood, p. 57
  22. ^ Wilson, p. 51
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  25. ^ Flood, Raymond; Rice, Adrian; Wilson, Robin (2011). Mathematics in Victorian Britain. Oxfordshire, England: Oxford University Press. p. 41. ISBN 978-0-19-960139-4. OCLC 721931689.
  26. ^ Cohen, pp. 414–416
  27. ^ a b c d e f Leach, Ch. 2.
  28. ^ Leach, p. 91
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Cohen, pp. 100–4
  30. ^ Gardner, Martin (2000). Introduction to The annotated Alice: Alice's adventures in Wonderland & Through the looking glass. W. W. Norton & Company. p. xv. ISBN 0-517-02962-6.
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  32. ^ Collingwood
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  36. ^ Blackburn, S. (1995). "Practical Tortoise Raising". Mind. 104 (416): 695–711. doi:10.1093/mind/104.416.695.
  37. ^ Heath, Peter L. (2007). "Introduction". La Guida Di Bragia, a Ballad Opera for the Marionette Theatre. Lewis Carroll Society of North America. pp. vii–xvi. ISBN 978-0-930326-15-9.
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  42. ^ a b Winchester, Simon (2011). The Alice Behind Wonderland. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-539619-5. OCLC 641525313.
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  57. ^ Cohen, Morton N. (1976). "Hark the Snark". In Guilano, Edward (ed.). Lewis Carroll Observed. New York: Clarkson N. Potter, Inc. pp. 92–110. ISBN 0-517-52497-X.
  58. ^ Williams, Sidney Herbert; Madan, Falconer (1979). Handbook of the literature of the Rev. C.L. Dodgson. Folkestone, England: Dawson. p. 68. ISBN 9780712909068. OCLC 5754676.
  59. ^ Greenarce, Selwyn (2006) [1876]. "The Listing of the Snark". In Martin Gardner (ed.). The Annotated Hunting of the Snark (Definitive ed.). W. W. Norton. pp. 117–147. ISBN 0-393-06242-2.
  60. ^ Clark, p. 93
  61. ^ Taylor, Roger; Wakeling, Edward (25 February 2002). Lewis Carroll, Photographer. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-07443-6.
  62. ^ Cohen, Morton (1999). "Reflections in a Looking Glass." New York: Aperture.
  63. ^ Thomas, p. 116
  64. ^ Thomas, p. 265
  65. ^ Wakeling, Edward (1998). "Lewis Carroll's Photography". An Exhibition From the Jon A. Lindseth Collection of C. L. Dodgson and Lewis Carroll. New York, NY: The Grolier Club. pp. 55–67. ISBN 0-910672-23-7.
  66. ^ Flodden W. Heron, "Lewis Carroll, Inventor of Postage Stamp Case" in Stamps, vol. 26, no. 12, 25 March 1939
  67. ^ . The Lewis Carroll Society. 28 April 2005. Archived from the original on 21 March 2012. Retrieved 10 March 2011.
  68. ^ Everson, Michael. (2011) "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland: An edition printed in the Nyctographic Square Alphabet devised by Lewis Carroll". Foreword by Alan Tannenbaum, Éire: Cathair na Mart. ISBN 978-1-904808-78-7
  69. ^ Gardner, Martin. "Word Ladders: Lewis Carroll's Doublets". No. Vol. 80, No. 487, Centenary Issue (Mar. 1996). The Mathematical Gazette. JSTOR 3620349. from the original on 20 April 2021. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  70. ^ Deanna Haunsperger, Stephen Kennedy (31 July 2006). The Edge of the Universe: Celebrating Ten Years of Math Horizons. Mathematical Association of America. p. 22. ISBN 0-88385-555-0.
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  72. ^ Charles Dodgson, Principles of Parliamentary Representation (1884)
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  75. ^ Wilson, p. 61
  76. ^ Gardner, Martin. (1958) "Logic Machines and Diagrams". Brighton, Sussex: Harvester Press
  77. ^ Bartley, William Warren III, ed. (1977) "Lewis Carroll's Symbolic Logic". New York: Clarkson N. Potter, 2nd ed 1986.
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  79. ^ "Modern Logic: The Boolean Period: Carroll – Encyclopedia.com". from the original on 3 August 2020. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
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  82. ^ Clark, Dorothy G. (April 2010). "The Place of Lewis Carroll in Children's Literature (review)". The Lion and the Unicorn. 34 (2): 253–258. doi:10.1353/uni.0.0495. S2CID 143924225. from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  83. ^ Carroll, Lewis (1979). The Letters of Lewis Carroll, Volumes 1–2. Oxford University Press. p. 657. Dec. 30th.—To London with M—, and took her to "Alice in Wonderland," Mr. Savile Clarke's play at the Prince of Wales's Theatre... as a whole, the play seems a success.
  84. ^ Angelica Shirley Carpenter (2002). Lewis Carroll: Through the Looking Glass. Lerner. p. 98.ISBN 978-0822500735.
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  89. ^ All Saints' Church, Daresbury, Church booklet
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  91. ^ Cohen, p. 228
  92. ^ Robson, Catherine (2001). Men in Wonderland: The Lost Girlhood of the Victorian Gentlemen. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. p. 137. ISBN 978-0691004228.
  93. ^ . Contrariwise.wild-reality.net. Archived from the original on 7 February 2012. Retrieved 19 October 2019.
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  100. ^ Dodgson's MS diaries, volume 8, see prayers scattered throughout the text
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  112. ^ Maudie, F.W. "Migraine and Lewis Carroll". The Migraine Periodical. 17.
  113. ^ Podoll, K; Robinson, D (1999). "Lewis Carroll's migraine experiences". The Lancet. 353 (9161): 1366. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(05)74368-3. PMID 10218566. S2CID 5082284.
  114. ^ Woolf, Jenny (4 February 2010). The Mystery of Lewis Carroll. St. Martin's Press. pp. 298–9. ISBN 978-0-312-67371-0.
  115. ^ . Lewiscarrollsociety.org.uk. Archived from the original on 29 March 2016. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
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  120. ^ The Carrollian. Lewis Carroll Society. Issue 7–8. p. 7. 2001: "In 1862 when Lewis Carroll sent to Yates the manuscript of the words of a 'melancholy song', entitled 'Miss Jones', he hoped that it would be published and performed by a comedian on a London music-hall stage." 4 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  121. ^ The Hunting of the Snark and Other Poems and Verses, New York: Harper & Brothers, 1903

Bibliography edit

  • Clark, Ann (1979). Lewis Carroll: A Biography. London: J. M. Dent. ISBN 0-460-04302-1.
  • Cohen, Morton (1996). Lewis Carroll: A Biography. Vintage Books. pp. 30–35. ISBN 0-679-74562-9.
  • Collingwood, Stuart Dodgson (1898). The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll. London: T. Fisher Unwin.
  • Leach, Karoline (1999). In the Shadow of the Dreamchild: A New Understanding of Lewis Carroll. London: Peter Owen.
  • Pizzati, Giovanni: "An Endless Procession of People in Masquerade". Figure piane in Alice in Wonderland. 1993, Cagliari.
  • Reed, Langford: The Life of Lewis Carroll (1932. London: W. and G. Foyle)
  • Taylor, Alexander L., Knight: The White Knight (1952. Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd)
  • Taylor, Roger & Wakeling, Edward: Lewis Carroll, Photographer. 2002. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-07443-7. (Catalogues nearly every Carroll photograph known to be still in existence.)
  • Thomas, Donald (1996). Lewis Carroll: A Biography. Barnes and Noble, Inc. ISBN 978-0-7607-1232-0.
  • Wilson, Robin (2008). Lewis Carroll in Numberland: His Fantastical Mathematical Logical Life. London: Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0-7139-9757-6.
  • Woolf, Jenny: The Mystery of Lewis Carroll. 2010. New York: St Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-61298-6

Further reading edit

  • Black, Duncan (1958). The Circumstances in which Rev. C. L. Dodgson (Lewis Carroll) wrote his Three Pamphlets and Appendix: Text of Dodgson's Three Pamphlets and of 'The Cyclostyled Sheet' in The Theory of Committees and Elections, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
  • Bowman, Isa (1899). The Story of Lewis Carroll: Told for Young People by the Real Alice in Wonderland, Miss Isa Bowman. London: J.M. Dent & Co.
  • Carroll, Lewis: The Annotated Alice: 150th Anniversary Deluxe Edition. Illustrated by John Tenniel. Edited by Martin Gardner & Mark Burstein. W. W. Norton. 2015. ISBN 978-0-393-24543-1
  • Dodgson, Charles L.: Euclid and His Modern Rivals. Macmillan. 1879.

  • Dodgson, Charles L.: The Pamphlets of Lewis Carroll
  • Douglas-Fairhurst, Robert (2016). The Story of Alice: Lewis Carroll and the Secret History of Wonderland. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674970762.
  • Goodacre, Selwyn (2006). All the Snarks: The Illustrated Editions of the Hunting of the Snark. Oxford: Inky Parrot Press.
  • Graham-Smith, Darien (2005). Contextualising Carroll, University of Wales, Bangor. PhD thesis.
  • Edward Guiliano (1982). Lewis Carroll, a Celebration: Essays on the Occasion of the 150th Anniversary of the Birth of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, C. N. Potter, London.
  • Huxley, Francis: The Raven and the Writing Desk. 1976. ISBN 0-06-012113-0.
  • Kelly, Richard: Lewis Carroll. 1990. Boston: Twayne Publishers.
  • Kelly, Richard (ed.): Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. 2000. Peterborough, Ontario: Broadviewpress.
  • Lakoff, Robin T.: Lewis Carroll: Subversive Pragmaticist. 2022. Pragmatics : Quarterly Publication of the International Pragmatics Association, pp. 367–85
  • Lovett, Charlie: Lewis Carroll Among His Books: A Descriptive Catalogue of the Private Library of Charles L. Dodgson. 2005. ISBN 0-7864-2105-3
  • Richardson, Joanna: The Young Lewis Carroll. London: Max Parrish, 1963.
  • Waggoner, Diane (2020). Lewis Carroll's Photography and Modern Childhood. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-19318-2.
  • Wakeling, Edward (2015). The Photographs of Lewis Carroll: A Catalogue Raisonné. Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-76743-0.
  • Wullschläger, Jackie: Inventing Wonderland. ISBN 0-7432-2892-8. – Also looks at Edward Lear (of the "nonsense" verses), J. M. Barrie (Peter Pan), Kenneth Grahame (The Wind in the Willows), and A. A. Milne (Winnie-the-Pooh).
  • N.N.: Dreaming in Pictures: The Photography of Lewis Carroll. Yale University Press & SFMOMA, 2004. (Places Carroll firmly in the art photography tradition.)
  • Over the years, many retellings of Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland. This includes examples like: Alice in Zombieland by Gena Showalter.
  • Schütze, Franziska: Disney in Wonderland: A Comparative Analysis of Disney's Alice in Wonderland Film Adaptations from 1951 and 2010

External links edit

Digital collections

Physical collections

  • Guide to Harcourt Amory collection of Lewis Carroll at , Harvard University
  • Lewis Carroll at the British Library
  • Lewis Carroll online exhibition at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin
  • Lewis Carroll Scrapbook Collection at the Library of Congress
  • "Archival material relating to Lewis Carroll". UK National Archives.  

Biographical information and scholarship

  • Lewis Carroll at victorianweb.org
  • Contrariwise: the Association for New Lewis Carroll Studies – articles by leading members of the 'new scholarship'
  • Lewis Carroll's Shifting Reputation 4 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  • Lewis Carroll: Logic, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Other links

lewis, carroll, other, people, named, charles, dodgson, charles, dodgson, charles, lutwidge, dodgson, sən, january, 1832, january, 1898, better, known, name, english, author, poet, mathematician, photographer, most, notable, works, alice, adventures, wonderlan. For other people named Charles Dodgson see Charles Dodgson Charles Lutwidge Dodgson ˈ l ʌ t w ɪ dʒ ˈ d ɒ dʒ s en LUT wij DOJ sen 27 January 1832 14 January 1898 better known by his pen name Lewis Carroll was an English author poet mathematician and photographer His most notable works are Alice s Adventures in Wonderland 1865 and its sequel Through the Looking Glass 1871 He was noted for his facility with word play logic and fantasy His poems Jabberwocky 1871 and The Hunting of the Snark 1876 are classified in the genre of literary nonsense Lewis CarrollCarroll in June 1857BornCharles Lutwidge Dodgson 1832 01 27 27 January 1832Daresbury Cheshire EnglandDied14 January 1898 1898 01 14 aged 65 Guildford Surrey EnglandResting placeMount Cemetery Guildford Surrey EnglandOccupationAuthorillustratorpoetmathematicianphotographerteacherinventorEducationChrist Church OxfordGenreChildren s literaturefantasy literaturemathematical logicpoetryliterary nonsenselinear algebravoting theoryParentsCharles Dodgson father RelativesEdwin Dodgson brother Charles Dodgson great grandfather SignatureCarroll came from a family of high church Anglicans and developed a long relationship with Christ Church Oxford where he lived for most of his life as a scholar and teacher Alice Liddell a daughter of Henry Liddell the Dean of Christ Church is widely identified as the original inspiration for Alice in Wonderland though Carroll always denied this An avid puzzler Carroll created the word ladder puzzle which he then called Doublets which he published in his weekly column for Vanity Fair magazine between 1879 and 1881 In 1982 a memorial stone to Carroll was unveiled at Poets Corner in Westminster Abbey There are societies in many parts of the world dedicated to the enjoyment and promotion of his works 1 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Character and appearance 2 1 Health problems 2 2 Social connections 2 3 Politics religion and philosophy 3 Artistic activities 3 1 Literature 3 1 1 Alice books 3 1 2 The Hunting of the Snark 3 1 3 Sylvie and Bruno 3 2 Photography 1856 1880 3 3 Inventions 4 Mathematical work 4 1 Mathematical logic 4 2 Algebra 4 3 Recreational mathematics 5 Correspondence 6 Later years 7 Death 8 Controversies and mysteries 8 1 Sexuality 8 2 Ordination 8 3 Missing diaries 8 4 Migraine and epilepsy 9 Legacy 10 Works 10 1 Literary works 10 2 Mathematical works 10 3 Other works 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarly life editDodgson s family was predominantly northern English conservative and high church Anglican Most of his male ancestors were army officers or Anglican clergymen His great grandfather Charles Dodgson had risen through the ranks of the church to become the Bishop of Elphin in rural Ireland 3 His paternal grandfather another Charles had been an army captain killed in action in Ireland in 1803 when his two sons were hardly more than babies 4 The older of these sons yet another Charles Dodgson was Carroll s father He went to Westminster School and then to Christ Church Oxford 5 He reverted to the other family tradition and took holy orders He was mathematically gifted and won a double first degree which could have been the prelude to a brilliant academic career Instead he married his first cousin Frances Jane Lutwidge in 1830 and became a country parson 6 7 Dodgson was born on 27 January 1832 at All Saints Vicarage in Daresbury Cheshire 8 the oldest boy and the third oldest of 11 children When he was 11 his father was given the living of Croft on Tees Yorkshire and the whole family moved to the spacious rectory This remained their home for the next 25 years Charles father was an active and highly conservative cleric of the Church of England who later became the Archdeacon of Richmond 9 and involved himself sometimes influentially in the intense religious disputes that were dividing the church He was high church inclining toward Anglo Catholicism an admirer of John Henry Newman and the Tractarian movement and did his best to instil such views in his children However Charles developed an ambivalent relationship with his father s values and with the Church of England as a whole 10 During his early youth Dodgson was educated at home His reading lists preserved in the family archives testify to a precocious intellect at the age of seven he was reading books such as The Pilgrim s Progress He also spoke with a stammer a condition shared by most of his siblings 11 that often inhibited his social life throughout his years At the age of twelve he was sent to Richmond Grammar School now part of Richmond School in Richmond North Yorkshire nbsp Lewis Carroll self portrait c 1856 aged 24 at that timeIn 1846 Dodgson entered Rugby School where he was evidently unhappy as he wrote some years after leaving I cannot say that any earthly considerations would induce me to go through my three years again I can honestly say that if I could have been secure from annoyance at night the hardships of the daily life would have been comparative trifles to bear 12 He did not claim he suffered from bullying but cited little boys as the main targets of older bullies at Rugby 13 Stuart Dodgson Collingwood Dodgson s nephew wrote that even though it is hard for those who have only known him as the gentle and retiring don to believe it it is nevertheless true that long after he left school his name was remembered as that of a boy who knew well how to use his fists in defence of a righteous cause which is the protection of the smaller boys 13 Scholastically though he excelled with apparent ease I have not had a more promising boy at his age since I came to Rugby observed mathematics master R B Mayor 14 Francis Walkingame s The Tutor s Assistant Being a Compendium of Arithmetic the mathematics textbook that the young Dodgson used still survives and it contained an inscription in Latin which translates to This book belongs to Charles Lutwidge Dodgson hands off 15 Some pages also included annotations such as the one found on p 129 where he wrote Not a fair question in decimals next to a question 16 He left Rugby at the end of 1849 and matriculated at the University of Oxford in May 1850 as a member of his father s old college Christ Church 17 After waiting for rooms in college to become available he went into residence in January 1851 18 He had been at Oxford only two days when he received a summons home His mother had died of inflammation of the brain perhaps meningitis or a stroke at the age of 47 18 His early academic career veered between high promise and irresistible distraction He did not always work hard but was exceptionally gifted and achievement came easily to him In 1852 he obtained first class honours in Mathematics Moderations and was soon afterwards nominated to a Studentship by his father s old friend Canon Edward Pusey 19 20 In 1854 he obtained first class honours in the Final Honours School of Mathematics standing first on the list and thus graduated as Bachelor of Arts 21 22 He remained at Christ Church studying and teaching but the next year he failed an important scholarship exam through his self confessed inability to apply himself to study 23 24 Even so his talent as a mathematician won him the Christ Church Mathematical Lectureship in 1855 25 which he continued to hold for the next 26 years 26 Despite early unhappiness Dodgson remained at Christ Church in various capacities until his death including that of Sub Librarian of the Christ Church library where his office was close to the Deanery where Alice Liddell lived 27 Character and appearance editHealth problems edit nbsp 1863 photograph of Carroll by Oscar G RejlanderThe young adult Charles Dodgson was about 6 feet 1 83 m tall and slender and he had curly brown hair and blue or grey eyes depending on the account He was described in later life as somewhat asymmetrical and as carrying himself rather stiffly and awkwardly although this might be on account of a knee injury sustained in middle age As a very young child he suffered a fever that left him deaf in one ear At the age of 17 he suffered a severe attack of whooping cough which was probably responsible for his chronically weak chest in later life In early childhood he acquired a stammer which he referred to as his hesitation it remained throughout his life 27 The stammer has always been a significant part of the image of Dodgson While one apocryphal story says that he stammered only in adult company and was free and fluent with children there is no evidence to support this idea 28 Many children of his acquaintance remembered the stammer while many adults failed to notice it Dodgson himself seems to have been far more acutely aware of it than most people whom he met it is said that he caricatured himself as the Dodo in Alice s Adventures in Wonderland referring to his difficulty in pronouncing his last name but this is one of the many supposed facts often repeated for which no first hand evidence remains He did indeed refer to himself as a dodo but whether or not this reference was to his stammer is simply speculation 27 Dodgson s stammer did trouble him but it was never so debilitating that it prevented him from applying his other personal qualities to do well in society He lived in a time when people commonly devised their own amusements and when singing and recitation were required social skills and the young Dodgson was well equipped to be an engaging entertainer He could reportedly sing at a passable level and was not afraid to do so before an audience He was also adept at mimicry and storytelling and reputedly quite good at charades 27 Social connections edit In the interim between his early published writings and the success of the Alice books Dodgson began to move in the pre Raphaelite social circle He first met John Ruskin in 1857 and became friendly with him Around 1863 he developed a close relationship with Dante Gabriel Rossetti and his family He would often take pictures of the family in the garden of the Rossetti s house in Chelsea London He also knew William Holman Hunt John Everett Millais and Arthur Hughes among other artists He knew fairy tale author George MacDonald well it was the enthusiastic reception of Alice by the young MacDonald children that persuaded him to submit the work for publication 27 29 Politics religion and philosophy edit In broad terms Dodgson has traditionally been regarded as politically religiously and personally conservative Martin Gardner labels Dodgson as a Tory who was awed by lords and inclined to be snobbish towards inferiors 30 William Tuckwell in his Reminiscences of Oxford 1900 regarded him as austere shy precise absorbed in mathematical reverie watchfully tenacious of his dignity stiffly conservative in political theological social theory his life mapped out in squares like Alice s landscape 31 Dodgson was ordained a deacon in the Church of England on 22 December 1861 In The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll the editor states that his Diary is full of such modest depreciations of himself and his work interspersed with earnest prayers too sacred and private to be reproduced here that God would forgive him the past and help him to perform His holy will in the future 32 When a friend asked him about his religious views Dodgson wrote in response that he was a member of the Church of England but doubt ed if he was fully a High Churchman He added I believe that when you and I come to lie down for the last time if only we can keep firm hold of the great truths Christ taught us our own utter worthlessness and His infinite worth and that He has brought us back to our one Father and made us His brethren and so brethren to one another we shall have all we need to guide us through the shadows Most assuredly I accept to the full the doctrines you refer to that Christ died to save us that we have no other way of salvation open to us but through His death and that it is by faith in Him and through no merit of ours that we are reconciled to God and most assuredly I can cordially say I owe all to Him who loved me and died on the Cross of Calvary Carroll 1897 33 Dodgson also expressed interest in other fields He was an early member of the Society for Psychical Research and one of his letters suggests that he accepted as real what was then called thought reading 34 Dodgson wrote some studies of various philosophical arguments In 1895 he developed a philosophical regressus argument on deductive reasoning in his article What the Tortoise Said to Achilles which appeared in one of the early volumes of Mind 35 The article was reprinted in the same journal a hundred years later in 1995 with a subsequent article by Simon Blackburn titled Practical Tortoise Raising 36 Artistic activities edit nbsp One of Carroll s own illustrationsLiterature edit From a young age Dodgson wrote poetry and short stories contributing heavily to the family magazine Mischmasch and later sending them to various magazines enjoying moderate success Between 1854 and 1856 his work appeared in the national publications The Comic Times and The Train as well as smaller magazines such as the Whitby Gazette and the Oxford Critic Most of this output was humorous sometimes satirical but his standards and ambitions were exacting I do not think I have yet written anything worthy of real publication in which I do not include the Whitby Gazette or the Oxonian Advertiser but I do not despair of doing so someday he wrote in July 1855 27 Sometime after 1850 he did write puppet plays for his siblings entertainment of which one has survived La Guida di Bragia 37 In March 1856 he published his first piece of work under the name that would make him famous A romantic poem called Solitude appeared in The Train under the authorship of Lewis Carroll This pseudonym was a play on his real name Lewis was the anglicised form of Ludovicus which was the Latin for Lutwidge and Carroll an Irish surname similar to the Latin name Carolus from which comes the name Charles 7 The transition went as follows Charles Lutwidge translated into Latin as Carolus Ludovicus This was then translated back into English as Carroll Lewis and then reversed to make Lewis Carroll 38 This pseudonym was chosen by editor Edmund Yates from a list of four submitted by Dodgson the others being Edgar Cuthwellis Edgar U C Westhill and Louis Carroll 39 Alice books edit nbsp The chief difficulty Alice found at first was in managing her flamingo Illustration by John Tenniel 1865 nbsp The Jabberwock as illustrated by John Tenniel for Lewis Carroll s Through the Looking Glass including the poem Jabberwocky In 1856 Dean Henry Liddell arrived at Christ Church bringing with him his young family all of whom would figure largely in Dodgson s life over the following years and would greatly influence his writing career Dodgson became close friends with Liddell s wife Lorina and their children particularly the three sisters Lorina Edith and Alice Liddell He was widely assumed for many years to have derived his own Alice from Alice Liddell the acrostic poem at the end of Through the Looking Glass spells out her name in full and there are also many superficial references to her hidden in the text of both books It has been noted that Dodgson himself repeatedly denied in later life that his little heroine was based on any real child 40 41 and he frequently dedicated his works to girls of his acquaintance adding their names in acrostic poems at the beginning of the text Gertrude Chataway s name appears in this form at the beginning of The Hunting of the Snark and it is not suggested that this means that any of the characters in the narrative are based on her 41 Information is scarce Dodgson s diaries for the years 1858 1862 are missing but it seems clear that his friendship with the Liddell family was an important part of his life in the late 1850s and he grew into the habit of taking the children on rowing trips first the boy Harry and later the three girls accompanied by an adult friend 42 to nearby Nuneham Courtenay or Godstow 43 It was on one such expedition on 4 July 1862 that Dodgson invented the outline of the story that eventually became his first and greatest commercial success He told the story to Alice Liddell and she begged him to write it down and Dodgson eventually after much delay presented her with a handwritten illustrated manuscript entitled Alice s Adventures Under Ground in November 1864 43 Before this the family of friend and mentor George MacDonald read Dodgson s incomplete manuscript and the enthusiasm of the MacDonald children encouraged Dodgson to seek publication In 1863 he had taken the unfinished manuscript to Macmillan the publisher who liked it immediately After the possible alternative titles were rejected Alice Among the Fairies and Alice s Golden Hour the work was finally published as Alice s Adventures in Wonderland in 1865 under the Lewis Carroll pen name which Dodgson had first used some nine years earlier 29 The illustrations this time were by Sir John Tenniel Dodgson evidently thought that a published book would need the skills of a professional artist Annotated versions provide insights into many of the ideas and hidden meanings that are prevalent in these books 44 45 Critical literature has often proposed Freudian interpretations of the book as a descent into the dark world of the subconscious as well as seeing it as a satire upon contemporary mathematical advances 46 47 The overwhelming commercial success of the first Alice book changed Dodgson s life in many ways 48 49 50 The fame of his alter ego Lewis Carroll soon spread around the world He was inundated with fan mail and with sometimes unwanted attention Indeed according to one popular story Queen Victoria herself enjoyed Alice in Wonderland so much that she commanded that he dedicate his next book to her and was accordingly presented with his next work a scholarly mathematical volume entitled An Elementary Treatise on Determinants 51 52 Dodgson himself vehemently denied this story commenting It is utterly false in every particular nothing even resembling it has occurred 52 53 and it is unlikely for other reasons As T B Strong comments in a Times article It would have been clean contrary to all his practice to identify the author of Alice with the author of his mathematical works 54 55 He also began earning quite substantial sums of money but continued with his seemingly disliked post at Christ Church 29 Late in 1871 he published the sequel Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There The title page of the first edition erroneously gives 1872 as the date of publication 56 Its somewhat darker mood possibly reflects changes in Dodgson s life His father s death in 1868 plunged him into a depression that lasted some years 29 The Hunting of the Snark edit In 1876 Dodgson produced his next great work The Hunting of the Snark a fantastical nonsense poem with illustrations by Henry Holiday exploring the adventures of a bizarre crew of nine tradesmen and one beaver who set off to find the snark It received largely mixed reviews from Carroll s contemporary reviewers 57 but was enormously popular with the public having been reprinted seventeen times between 1876 and 1908 58 and has seen various adaptations into musicals opera theatre plays and music 59 Painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti reputedly became convinced that the poem was about him 29 Sylvie and Bruno edit In 1895 30 years after the publication of his masterpieces Carroll attempted a comeback producing a two volume tale of the fairy siblings Sylvie and Bruno Carroll entwines two plots set in two alternative worlds one set in rural England and the other in the fairytale kingdoms of Elfland Outland and others The fairytale world satirizes English society and more specifically the world of academia Sylvie and Bruno came out in two volumes and is considered a lesser work although it has remained in print for over a century Photography 1856 1880 edit nbsp Photo of Alice Liddell taken by Lewis Carroll 1858 In 1856 Dodgson took up the new art form of photography under the influence first of his uncle Skeffington Lutwidge and later of his Oxford friend Reginald Southey 60 He soon excelled at the art and became a well known gentleman photographer and he seems even to have toyed with the idea of making a living out of it in his very early years 29 A study by Roger Taylor and Edward Wakeling exhaustively lists every surviving print and Taylor calculates that just over half of his surviving work depicts young girls though about 60 of his original photographic portfolio is now missing 61 Dodgson also made many studies of men women boys and landscapes his subjects also include skeletons dolls dogs statues paintings and trees 62 His pictures of children were taken with a parent in attendance and many of the pictures were taken in the Liddell garden because natural sunlight was required for good exposures 42 nbsp The Rossetti Family by Lewis Carroll 1863 L R Dante Gabriel Rossetti Christina Rossetti Frances Polidori and William Michael RossettiHe also found photography to be a useful entree into higher social circles 63 During the most productive part of his career he made portraits of notable sitters such as John Everett Millais Ellen Terry Dante Gabriel Rossetti Julia Margaret Cameron Michael Faraday Lord Salisbury and Alfred Tennyson 29 By the time that Dodgson abruptly ceased photography 1880 after 24 years he had established his own studio on the roof of Tom Quad created around 3 000 images and become an amateur master of the medium though fewer than 1 000 images have survived time and deliberate destruction He stopped taking photographs because keeping his studio working was too time consuming 64 He used the wet collodion process commercial photographers who started using the dry plate process in the 1870s took pictures more quickly 65 Popular taste changed with the advent of Modernism affecting the types of photographs that he produced Inventions edit To promote letter writing Dodgson invented The Wonderland Postage Stamp Case in 1889 This was a cloth backed folder with twelve slots two marked for inserting the most commonly used penny stamp and one each for the other current denominations up to one shilling The folder was then put into a slipcase decorated with a picture of Alice on the front and the Cheshire Cat on the back It intended to organize stamps wherever one stored their writing implements Carroll expressly notes in Eight or Nine Wise Words about Letter Writing it is not intended to be carried in a pocket or purse as the most common individual stamps could easily be carried on their own The pack included a copy of a pamphlet version of this lecture 66 67 nbsp Reconstructed nyctograph with scale demonstrated by a 5 euro cent Another invention was a writing tablet called the nyctograph that allowed note taking in the dark thus eliminating the need to get out of bed and strike a light when one woke with an idea The device consisted of a gridded card with sixteen squares and a system of symbols representing an alphabet of Dodgson s design using letter shapes similar to the Graffiti writing system on a Palm device 68 He also devised a number of games including an early version of what today is known as Scrabble Devised some time in 1878 he invented the doublet see word ladder a form of brain teaser that is still popular today changing one word into another by altering one letter at a time each successive change always resulting in a genuine word 69 For instance CAT is transformed into DOG by the following steps CAT COT DOT DOG 29 It first appeared in the 29 March 1879 issue of Vanity Fair with Carroll writing a weekly column for the magazine for two years the final column dated 9 April 1881 70 The games and puzzles of Lewis Carroll were the subject of Martin Gardner s March 1960 Mathematical Games column in Scientific American Other items include a rule for finding the day of the week for any date a means for justifying right margins on a typewriter a steering device for a velociman a type of tricycle fairer elimination rules for tennis tournaments a new sort of postal money order rules for reckoning postage rules for a win in betting rules for dividing a number by various divisors a cardboard scale for the Senior Common Room at Christ Church which held next to a glass ensured the right amount of liqueur for the price paid a double sided adhesive strip to fasten envelopes or mount things in books a device for helping a bedridden invalid to read from a book placed sideways and at least two ciphers for cryptography 29 He also proposed alternative systems of parliamentary representation He proposed the so called Dodgson s method using the Condorcet method 71 In 1884 he proposed a proportional representation system based on multi member districts each voter casting only a single vote quotas as minimum requirements to take seats and votes transferable by candidates through what is now called Liquid democracy 72 Mathematical work edit nbsp A posthumous portrait of Lewis Carroll by Hubert von Herkomer based on photographs This painting now hangs in the Great Hall of Christ Church Oxford Within the academic discipline of mathematics Dodgson worked primarily in the fields of geometry linear and matrix algebra mathematical logic and recreational mathematics producing nearly a dozen books under his real name Dodgson also developed new ideas in linear algebra e g the first printed proof of the Rouche Capelli theorem 73 74 probability and the study of elections e g Dodgson s method and committees some of this work was not published until well after his death His occupation as Mathematical Lecturer at Christ Church gave him some financial security 75 Mathematical logic edit His work in the field of mathematical logic attracted renewed interest in the late 20th century Martin Gardner s book on logic machines and diagrams and William Warren Bartley s posthumous publication of the second part of Dodgson s symbolic logic book have sparked a reevaluation of Dodgson s contributions to symbolic logic 76 77 78 It is recognized that in his Symbolic Logic Part II Dodgson introduced the Method of Trees the earliest modern use of a truth tree 79 Algebra edit Robbins and Rumsey s investigation 80 of Dodgson condensation a method of evaluating determinants led them to the alternating sign matrix conjecture now a theorem Recreational mathematics edit The discovery in the 1990s of additional ciphers that Dodgson had constructed in addition to his Memoria Technica showed that he had employed sophisticated mathematical ideas in their creation 81 Correspondence editDodgson wrote and received as many as 98 721 letters according to a special letter register which he devised He documented his advice about how to write more satisfying letters in a missive entitled Eight or Nine Wise Words about Letter Writing published in 1890 82 Later years edit nbsp Lewis Carroll in later lifeDodgson s existence remained little changed over the last twenty years of his life despite his growing wealth and fame He continued to teach at Christ Church until 1881 and remained in residence there until his death Public appearances included attending the West End musical Alice in Wonderland the first major live production of his Alice books at the Prince of Wales Theatre on 30 December 1886 83 The two volumes of his last novel Sylvie and Bruno were published in 1889 and 1893 but the intricacy of this work was apparently not appreciated by contemporary readers it achieved nothing like the success of the Alice books with disappointing reviews and sales of only 13 000 copies 84 85 The only known occasion on which he travelled abroad was a trip to Russia in 1867 as an ecclesiastic together with the Reverend Henry Liddon He recounts the travel in his Russian Journal which was first commercially published in 1935 86 On his way to Russia and back he also saw different cities in Belgium Germany partitioned Poland and France In his early sixties Dodgson increasingly suffered from synovitis which eventually prevented him walking and sometimes left him bed ridden for months 87 Death edit nbsp The grave of Lewis Carroll at the Mount Cemetery in GuildfordDodgson died of pneumonia following influenza on 14 January 1898 at his sisters home The Chestnuts in Guildford in the county of Surrey just four days before the death of Henry Liddell He was two weeks away from turning 66 years old His funeral was held at the nearby St Mary s Church 88 His body was buried at the Mount Cemetery in Guildford 29 He is commemorated at All Saints Church Daresbury in its stained glass windows depicting characters from Alice s Adventures in Wonderland erected in 1935 89 Controversies and mysteries editSexuality edit Some late twentieth century biographers have suggested that Dodgson s interest in children had an erotic element including Morton N Cohen in his Lewis Carroll A Biography 1995 90 Donald Thomas in his Lewis Carroll A Portrait with Background 1995 and Michael Bakewell in his Lewis Carroll A Biography 1996 Cohen in particular speculates that Dodgson s sexual energies sought unconventional outlets and further writes We cannot know to what extent sexual urges lay behind Charles s preference for drawing and photographing children in the nude He contended the preference was entirely aesthetic But given his emotional attachment to children as well as his aesthetic appreciation of their forms his assertion that his interest was strictly artistic is naive He probably felt more than he dared acknowledge even to himself 91 nbsp Lewis Carroll portrait of Beatrice HatchCohen goes on to note that Dodgson apparently convinced many of his friends that his attachment to the nude female child form was free of any eroticism but adds that later generations look beneath the surface p 229 He argues that Dodgson may have wanted to marry the 11 year old Alice Liddell and that this was the cause of the unexplained break with the family in June 1863 29 an event for which other explanations are offered Biographers Derek Hudson and Roger Lancelyn Green stop short of identifying Dodgson as a paedophile Green also edited Dodgson s diaries and papers but they concur that he had a passion for small female children and next to no interest in the adult world citation needed Catherine Robson refers to Carroll as the Victorian era s most famous or infamous girl lover 92 Several other writers and scholars have challenged the evidential basis for Cohen s and others views about Dodgson s sexual interests Hugues Lebailly has endeavoured to set Dodgson s child photography within the Victorian Child Cult which perceived child nudity as essentially an expression of innocence 93 Lebailly claims that studies of child nudes were mainstream and fashionable in Dodgson s time and that most photographers made them as a matter of course including Oscar Gustave Rejlander and Julia Margaret Cameron Lebailly continues that child nudes even appeared on Victorian Christmas cards implying a very different social and aesthetic assessment of such material Lebailly concludes that it has been an error of Dodgson s biographers to view his child photography with 20th or 21st century eyes and to have presented it as some form of personal idiosyncrasy when it was a response to a prevalent aesthetic and philosophical movement of the time Karoline Leach s reappraisal of Dodgson focused in particular on his controversial sexuality She argues that the allegations of paedophilia rose initially from a misunderstanding of Victorian morals as well as the mistaken idea fostered by Dodgson s various biographers that he had no interest in adult women She termed the traditional image of Dodgson the Carroll Myth She drew attention to the large amounts of evidence in his diaries and letters that he was also keenly interested in adult women married and single and enjoyed several relationships with them that would have been considered scandalous by the social standards of his time She also pointed to the fact that many of those whom he described as child friends were girls in their late teens and even twenties 94 She argues that suggestions of paedophilia emerged only many years after his death when his well meaning family had suppressed all evidence of his relationships with women in an effort to preserve his reputation thus giving a false impression of a man interested only in little girls Similarly Leach points to a 1932 biography by Langford Reed as the source of the dubious claim that many of Carroll s female friendships ended when the girls reached the age of 14 95 In addition to the biographical works that have discussed Dodgson s sexuality there are modern artistic interpretations of his life and work that do so as well in particular Dennis Potter in his play Alice and his screenplay for the motion picture Dreamchild and Robert Wilson in his musical Alice Ordination edit Dodgson had been groomed for the ordained ministry in the Church of England from a very early age and was expected to be ordained within four years of obtaining his master s degree as a condition of his residency at Christ Church He delayed the process for some time but was eventually ordained as a deacon on 22 December 1861 but when the time came a year later to be ordained as a priest Dodgson appealed to the dean for permission not to proceed This was against college rules and initially Dean Liddell told him that he would have to consult the college ruling body which would almost certainly have resulted in his being expelled For unknown reasons Liddell changed his mind overnight and permitted him to remain at the college in defiance of the rules 96 Dodgson never became a priest unique amongst senior students of his time citation needed There is currently no conclusive evidence about why Dodgson rejected the priesthood Some have suggested that his stammer made him reluctant to take the step because he was afraid of having to preach 97 Wilson quotes letters by Dodgson describing difficulty in reading lessons and prayers rather than preaching in his own words 98 although Dodgson did indeed preach in later life even though not in priest s orders so it seems unlikely that his impediment was a major factor affecting his choice citation needed Wilson also points out that the Bishop of Oxford Samuel Wilberforce who ordained Dodgson had strong views against clergy going to the theatre one of Dodgson s great interests He was interested in minority forms of Christianity he was an admirer of F D Maurice and alternative religions theosophy 99 Dodgson became deeply troubled by an unexplained sense of sin and guilt at this time the early 1860s and frequently expressed the view in his diaries that he was a vile and worthless sinner unworthy of the priesthood and this sense of sin and unworthiness may well have affected his decision to abandon being ordained to the priesthood 100 Missing diaries edit At least four complete volumes and around seven pages of text are missing from Dodgson s 13 diaries 101 The loss of the volumes remains unexplained the pages have been removed by an unknown hand Most scholars assume that the diary material was removed by family members in the interests of preserving the family name but this has not been proven 102 Except for one page material is missing from his diaries for the period between 1853 and 1863 when Dodgson was 21 31 years old 103 104 During this period Dodgson began experiencing great mental and spiritual anguish and confessing to an overwhelming sense of his own sin This was also the period of time when he composed his extensive love poetry leading to speculation that the poems were autobiographical 105 106 Many theories have been put forward to explain the missing material A popular explanation for one missing page 27 June 1863 is that it might have been torn out to conceal a proposal of marriage on that day by Dodgson to the 11 year old Alice Liddell However there has never been any evidence to suggest this and a paper suggests evidence to the contrary which was discovered by Karoline Leach in the Dodgson family archive in 1996 107 better source needed nbsp The cut pages in diary document in the Dodgson family archive in WokingThis paper is known as the cut pages in diary document Carroll s nephew Philip Dodgson Jacques reports that he wrote it well after Carroll s death based on information from his aunts who destroyed two diary pages including the one for 27 June 1863 Jacques did not see the pages himself 108 The summary for 27 June states that Mrs Liddell told Dodgson there was gossip circulating about him and the Liddell family s governess as well as about his relationship with Ina presumably Alice s older sister Lorina Liddell The break with the Liddell family that occurred soon after was presumably in response to this gossip 109 107 Without evidence Leach suggests an alternative interpretation Lorina was also the name of Alice Liddell s mother What is deemed most crucial and surprising is the document seems to imply that Dodgson s break with the family was not connected with Alice at all Until a primary source is discovered the events of 27 June 1863 will remain in doubt however a 1930 letter from the younger Lorina Liddell to Alice may shed light on the matter Reporting an interview with an early Dodgson biographer she wrote I said his manner became too affectionate to you as you grew older and that mother spoke to him about it and that offended him so he ceased coming to visit us again as one had to find some reason for all intercourse ceasing Mr D used to take you on his knee I did not say that 110 Migraine and epilepsy edit In his diary for 1880 Dodgson recorded experiencing his first episode of migraine with aura describing very accurately the process of moving fortifications that are a manifestation of the aura stage of the syndrome 111 There is no clear evidence to show whether this was his first experience of migraine per se or he previously had the far more common form of migraine without aura although the latter seems most likely given the fact that migraine most commonly develops in the teens or early adulthood Another form of migraine aura called Alice in Wonderland syndrome has been named after Dodgson s book of the same name and its titular character because its manifestation can resemble the sudden size changes in the book It is also known as micropsia and macropsia a brain condition affecting the way that objects are perceived by the mind For example an affected person may look at a larger object such as a basketball and perceive it as having the size of a golf ball Some authors have suggested that Dodgson experienced this type of aura and used it as an inspiration in his work but there is no evidence that he did 112 113 Dodgson also had two attacks in which he lost consciousness He was diagnosed by a Dr Morshead Dr Brooks and Dr Stedman and they believed the attack and a consequent attack to be an epileptiform seizure initially thought to be fainting but Brooks changed his mind Some have concluded from this that he had this condition for his entire life but there is no evidence of this in his diaries beyond the diagnosis of the two attacks already mentioned 111 Some authors Sadi Ranson in particular have suggested that Carroll had temporal lobe epilepsy in which consciousness is not always completely lost but altered and in which the symptoms mimic many of the same experiences as Alice in Wonderland Carroll had at least one incident in which he suffered full loss of consciousness and awoke with a bloody nose which he recorded in his diary and noted that the episode left him not feeling himself for quite sometime afterward This attack was diagnosed as possibly epileptiform and Carroll himself later wrote of his seizures in the same diary Most of the standard diagnostic tests of today were not available in the nineteenth century Yvonne Hart consultant neurologist at the John Radcliffe Hospital Oxford considered Dodgson s symptoms Her conclusion quoted in Jenny Woolf s 2010 The Mystery of Lewis Carroll is that Dodgson very likely had migraine and may have had epilepsy but she emphasises that she would have considerable doubt about making a diagnosis of epilepsy without further information 114 Legacy edit nbsp Lewis Carroll memorial window Mad Hatter Dormouse and March Hare pictured at All Saints Church Daresbury CheshireThere are societies in many parts of the world dedicated to the enjoyment and promotion of his works and the investigation of his life 115 Copenhagen Street in Islington north London is the location of the Lewis Carroll Children s Library 116 In 1982 his great nephew unveiled a memorial stone to him in Poets Corner Westminster Abbey 117 In January 1994 an asteroid 6984 Lewiscarroll was discovered and named after Carroll The Lewis Carroll Centenary Wood near his birthplace in Daresbury opened in 2000 118 As Carroll was born in All Saints Vicarage he is commemorated at All Saints Church Daresbury by stained glass windows depicting characters from Alice s Adventures in Wonderland The Lewis Carroll Centre attached to the church was opened in March 2012 119 Works editLiterary works edit La Guida di Bragia a Ballad Opera for the Marionette Theatre around 1850 Miss Jones comic song 1862 120 Alice s Adventures in Wonderland 1865 Phantasmagoria and Other Poems 1869 Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There includes Jabberwocky and The Walrus and the Carpenter 1871 The Hunting of the Snark 1876 Rhyme And Reason 1883 shares some contents with the 1869 collection including the long poem Phantasmagoria A Tangled Tale 1885 Sylvie and Bruno 1889 The Nursery Alice 1890 Sylvie and Bruno Concluded 1893 Pillow Problems 1893 What the Tortoise Said to Achilles 1895 Three Sunsets and Other Poems 1898 The Manlet 1903 121 Mathematical works edit A Syllabus of Plane Algebraic Geometry 1860 The Fifth Book of Euclid Treated Algebraically 1858 and 1868 An Elementary Treatise on Determinants With Their Application to Simultaneous Linear Equations and Algebraic Equations Euclid and his Modern Rivals 1879 both literary and mathematical in style Symbolic Logic Part I Symbolic Logic Part II published posthumously The Alphabet Cipher 1868 The Game of Logic 1887 Curiosa Mathematica I 1888 Curiosa Mathematica II 1892 A discussion of the various methods of procedure in conducting elections 1873 Suggestions as to the best method of taking votes where more than two issues are to be voted on 1874 A method of taking votes on more than two issues 1876 collected as The Theory of Committees and Elections edited analysed and published in 1958 by Duncan BlackOther works edit Some Popular Fallacies about Vivisection Eight or Nine Wise Words About Letter Writing 1890 Notes by an Oxford Chiel 1865 74 The Principles of Parliamentary Representation 1884 See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Children s literature portalLewis Carroll identity Lewis Carroll Shelf Award RGS Worcester and The Alice Ottley School Miss Ottley the first Headmistress of The Alice Ottley School was a friend of Lewis Carroll One of the school s houses was named after him Carroll diagram Origins of a Story The White KnightReferences edit Lewis Carroll Societies Lewiscarrollsociety org uk Archived from the original on 29 March 2016 Retrieved 7 October 2020 Lewis Carroll Society of North America Inc Archived 26 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine Charity Navigator Retrieved 7 October Clark p 10 Collingwood pp 6 7 Bakewell Michael 1996 Lewis Carroll A Biography London Heinemann p 2 ISBN 9780434045792 Collingwood p 8 a b Cohen pp 30 35 McCulloch Fiona 2006 Lewis Carroll In Kastan David Scott ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of British Literature Vol 3 Harr Mirr Oxford U K Oxford University Press p 386 ISBN 9780195169218 Charles Lutwidge Dodgson The MacTutor History of Mathematics archive Archived from the original on 5 July 2011 Retrieved 8 March 2011 Cohen pp 200 202 Cohen p 4 Collingwood pp 30 31 a b Woolf Jenny 2010 The Mystery of Lewis Carroll Discovering the Whimsical Thoughtful and Sometimes Lonely Man Who Created Alice in Wonderland New York St Martin s Press pp 24 ISBN 9780312612986 Collingwood p 29 Carroll Lewis 1995 Wakeling Edward ed Rediscovered Lewis Carroll Puzzles New York City Dover Publications pp 13 ISBN 0486288617 Lovett Charlie 2005 Lewis Carroll Among His Books A Descriptive Catalogue of the Private Library of Charles L Dodgson Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company Inc Publishers p 329 ISBN 0786421053 Clark pp 63 64 a b Clark pp 64 65 Collingwood p 52 Clark p 74 Collingwood p 57 Wilson p 51 Cohen p 51 Clark p 79 Flood Raymond Rice Adrian Wilson Robin 2011 Mathematics in Victorian Britain Oxfordshire England Oxford University Press p 41 ISBN 978 0 19 960139 4 OCLC 721931689 Cohen pp 414 416 a b c d e f Leach Ch 2 Leach p 91 a b c d e f g h i j k Cohen pp 100 4 Gardner Martin 2000 Introduction to The annotated Alice Alice s adventures in Wonderland amp Through the looking glass W W Norton amp Company p xv ISBN 0 517 02962 6 Gardner Martin 2009 Introduction to Alice s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass Oxford University Press p xvi ISBN 978 0 517 02962 6 Collingwood Collingwood Chapter IX Hayness Rene e 1982 The Society for Psychical Research 1882 1982 A History London Macdonald amp Co pp 13 14 ISBN 0 356 07875 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Carroll L 1895 What the Tortoise Said to Achilles Mind IV 14 278 280 doi 10 1093 mind IV 14 278 Blackburn S 1995 Practical Tortoise Raising Mind 104 416 695 711 doi 10 1093 mind 104 416 695 Heath Peter L 2007 Introduction La Guida Di Bragia a Ballad Opera for the Marionette Theatre Lewis Carroll Society of North America pp vii xvi ISBN 978 0 930326 15 9 Roger Lancelyn Green On line Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived 9 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine Thomas p 129 Cohen Morton N ed 1979 The Letters of Lewis Carroll London Macmillan a b Leach Ch 5 The Unreal Alice a b Winchester Simon 2011 The Alice Behind Wonderland Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 539619 5 OCLC 641525313 a b Leach Ch 4 Gardner Martin 2000 The Annotated Alice The Definitive Edition New York W W Norton Heath Peter 1974 The Philosopher s Alice New York St Martin s Press Algebra in Wonderland The New York Times 7 March 2010 Archived from the original on 12 March 2010 Retrieved 10 February 2017 Bayley Melanie Alice s adventures in algebra Wonderland solved New Scientist Archived from the original on 25 January 2022 Retrieved 14 October 2016 Elster Charles Harrington 2006 The big book of beastly mispronunciations the complete opinionated guide for the careful speaker Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 158 159 ISBN 061842315X Archived from the original on 3 January 2017 Retrieved 3 August 2016 Emerson R H 1996 The Unpronounceables Difficult Literary Names 1500 1940 English Language Notes 34 2 63 74 ISSN 0013 8282 Lewis Carroll Biography in Context Gale Archived from the original on 26 March 2022 Retrieved 24 September 2015 Wilson a b Lewis Carroll Logician Nonsense Writer Mathematician and Photographer The Hitchhiker s Guide to the Galaxy BBC 26 August 2005 Archived from the original on 3 February 2009 Retrieved 12 February 2009 Dodgson Charles 1896 Symbolic Logic Strong T B 27 January 1932 Mr Dodgson Lewis Carroll at Oxford The Times Fit for a Queen Snopes 26 March 1999 Archived from the original on 26 March 2022 Retrieved 25 March 2011 Cohen Morton 24 June 2009 Introduction to Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass Random House ISBN 978 0 553 21345 4 Cohen Morton N 1976 Hark the Snark In Guilano Edward ed Lewis Carroll Observed New York Clarkson N Potter Inc pp 92 110 ISBN 0 517 52497 X Williams Sidney Herbert Madan Falconer 1979 Handbook of the literature of the Rev C L Dodgson Folkestone England Dawson p 68 ISBN 9780712909068 OCLC 5754676 Greenarce Selwyn 2006 1876 The Listing of the Snark In Martin Gardner ed The Annotated Hunting of the Snark Definitive ed W W Norton pp 117 147 ISBN 0 393 06242 2 Clark p 93 Taylor Roger Wakeling Edward 25 February 2002 Lewis Carroll Photographer Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 07443 6 Cohen Morton 1999 Reflections in a Looking Glass New York Aperture Thomas p 116 Thomas p 265 Wakeling Edward 1998 Lewis Carroll s Photography An Exhibition From the Jon A Lindseth Collection of C L Dodgson and Lewis Carroll New York NY The Grolier Club pp 55 67 ISBN 0 910672 23 7 Flodden W Heron Lewis Carroll Inventor of Postage Stamp Case in Stamps vol 26 no 12 25 March 1939 Carroll Related Stamps The Lewis Carroll Society 28 April 2005 Archived from the original on 21 March 2012 Retrieved 10 March 2011 Everson Michael 2011 Alice s Adventures in Wonderland An edition printed in the Nyctographic Square Alphabet devised by Lewis Carroll Foreword by Alan Tannenbaum Eire Cathair na Mart ISBN 978 1 904808 78 7 Gardner Martin Word Ladders Lewis Carroll s Doublets No Vol 80 No 487 Centenary Issue Mar 1996 The Mathematical Gazette JSTOR 3620349 Archived from the original on 20 April 2021 Retrieved 22 March 2022 Deanna Haunsperger Stephen Kennedy 31 July 2006 The Edge of the Universe Celebrating Ten Years of Math Horizons Mathematical Association of America p 22 ISBN 0 88385 555 0 Black Duncan McLean Iain McMillan Alistair Monroe Burt L Dodgson Charles Lutwidge 1996 A Mathematical Approach to Proportional Representation Springer ISBN 978 0 7923 9620 8 Archived from the original on 4 February 2021 Retrieved 4 October 2020 Charles Dodgson Principles of Parliamentary Representation 1884 Seneta Eugene 1984 Lewis Carroll as a Probabilist and Mathematician PDF The Mathematical Scientist 9 79 84 Archived PDF from the original on 30 January 2016 Retrieved 1 February 2015 Abeles Francine F 1998 Charles L Dodgson Mathematician An Exhibition From the Jon A Lindseth Collection of C L Dodgson and Lewis Carroll New York The Grolier Club pp 45 54 Wilson p 61 Gardner Martin 1958 Logic Machines and Diagrams Brighton Sussex Harvester Press Bartley William Warren III ed 1977 Lewis Carroll s Symbolic Logic New York Clarkson N Potter 2nd ed 1986 Moktefi Amirouche 2008 Lewis Carroll s Logic pp 457 505 in British Logic in the Nineteenth Century Vol 4 of Handbook of the History of Logic Dov M Gabbay and John Woods eds Amsterdam Elsevier Modern Logic The Boolean Period Carroll Encyclopedia com Archived from the original on 3 August 2020 Retrieved 22 July 2020 Robbins D P Rumsey H 1986 Determinants and alternating sign matrices Advances in Mathematics 62 2 169 doi 10 1016 0001 8708 86 90099 X Abeles F F 2005 Lewis Carroll s ciphers The literary connections Advances in Applied Mathematics 34 4 697 708 doi 10 1016 j aam 2004 06 006 Clark Dorothy G April 2010 The Place of Lewis Carroll in Children s Literature review The Lion and the Unicorn 34 2 253 258 doi 10 1353 uni 0 0495 S2CID 143924225 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 21 January 2014 Carroll Lewis 1979 The Letters of Lewis Carroll Volumes 1 2 Oxford University Press p 657 Dec 30th To London with M and took her to Alice in Wonderland Mr Savile Clarke s play at the Prince of Wales s Theatre as a whole the play seems a success Angelica Shirley Carpenter 2002 Lewis Carroll Through the Looking Glass Lerner p 98 ISBN 978 0822500735 Christensen Thomas 23 April 1991 Dodgson s Dodges rightreading com San Francisco California Archived from the original on 15 July 2011 Chronology of Works of Lewis Carroll Archived from the original on 20 February 2009 Retrieved 20 February 2009 The Colour Library Book of Great British Writers 1993 p 197 Colour Library Books Ltd Godalming England ISBN 0 86283 676 6 Lewis Carroll and St Mary s Church Guildford This Is Our Town website 30 October 2013 Archived from the original on 11 November 2016 Retrieved 10 November 2016 All Saints Church Daresbury Church booklet Cohen pp 166 167 254 255 Cohen p 228 Robson Catherine 2001 Men in Wonderland The Lost Girlhood of the Victorian Gentlemen Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press p 137 ISBN 978 0691004228 Association for new Lewis Carroll studies Contrariwise wild reality net Archived from the original on 7 February 2012 Retrieved 19 October 2019 Leach pp 16 17 Leach p 33 Dodgson s MS diaries volume 8 22 24 October 1862 Cohen p 263 Wilson pp 103 104 Leach p 134 Dodgson s MS diaries volume 8 see prayers scattered throughout the text Leach pp 48 51 Leach pp 48 51 Leach p 52 Wakeling Edward April 2003 The Real Lewis Carroll A Talk given to the Lewis Carroll Society Archived from the original on 8 July 2006 Retrieved 12 January 2023 Leach p 54 The Dodgson Family and Their Legacy Archived from the original on 14 January 2011 Retrieved 5 January 2011 a b The cut pages in diary document Archived from the original on 12 January 2023 Retrieved 12 January 2023 Cohen Morton N When love was young Times Literary Supplement 10 September 2004 Leach pp 170 2 Cohen When love was young a b Wakeling Edward Ed The Diaries of Lewis Carroll Vol 9 p 52 Maudie F W Migraine and Lewis Carroll The Migraine Periodical 17 Podoll K Robinson D 1999 Lewis Carroll s migraine experiences The Lancet 353 9161 1366 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 05 74368 3 PMID 10218566 S2CID 5082284 Woolf Jenny 4 February 2010 The Mystery of Lewis Carroll St Martin s Press pp 298 9 ISBN 978 0 312 67371 0 Lewis Carroll Societies Lewiscarrollsociety org uk Archived from the original on 29 March 2016 Retrieved 12 September 2013 A most curious thing Lewis Carroll Library designbybeam com Archived from the original on 3 April 2015 Retrieved 15 March 2013 LEWIS CARROLL IS HONORED ON 150TH BIRTHDAY The New York Times 18 December 1982 Archived from the original on 5 May 2015 Retrieved 30 January 2015 Lewis Carroll Centenary Wood near Daresbury Runcorn woodlandtrust org uk Archived from the original on 5 August 2020 Retrieved 27 November 2019 About Us Lewis Carroll Centre amp All Saints Daresbury PCC archived from the original on 14 April 2012 retrieved 11 April 2012 The Carrollian Lewis Carroll Society Issue 7 8 p 7 2001 In 1862 when Lewis Carroll sent to Yates the manuscript of the words of a melancholy song entitled Miss Jones he hoped that it would be published and performed by a comedian on a London music hall stage Archived 4 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine The Hunting of the Snark and Other Poems and Verses New York Harper amp Brothers 1903Bibliography editClark Ann 1979 Lewis Carroll A Biography London J M Dent ISBN 0 460 04302 1 Cohen Morton 1996 Lewis Carroll A Biography Vintage Books pp 30 35 ISBN 0 679 74562 9 Collingwood Stuart Dodgson 1898 The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll London T Fisher Unwin Leach Karoline 1999 In the Shadow of the Dreamchild A New Understanding of Lewis Carroll London Peter Owen Pizzati Giovanni An Endless Procession of People in Masquerade Figure piane in Alice in Wonderland 1993 Cagliari Reed Langford The Life of Lewis Carroll 1932 London W and G Foyle Taylor Alexander L Knight The White Knight 1952 Edinburgh Oliver and Boyd Taylor Roger amp Wakeling Edward Lewis Carroll Photographer 2002 Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 07443 7 Catalogues nearly every Carroll photograph known to be still in existence Thomas Donald 1996 Lewis Carroll A Biography Barnes and Noble Inc ISBN 978 0 7607 1232 0 Wilson Robin 2008 Lewis Carroll in Numberland His Fantastical Mathematical Logical Life London Allen Lane ISBN 978 0 7139 9757 6 Woolf Jenny The Mystery of Lewis Carroll 2010 New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 61298 6Further reading editBlack Duncan 1958 The Circumstances in which Rev C L Dodgson Lewis Carroll wrote his Three Pamphlets and Appendix Text of Dodgson s Three Pamphlets and of The Cyclostyled Sheet in The Theory of Committees and Elections Cambridge Cambridge University Press Bowman Isa 1899 The Story of Lewis Carroll Told for Young People by the Real Alice in Wonderland Miss Isa Bowman London J M Dent amp Co Carroll Lewis The Annotated Alice 150th Anniversary Deluxe Edition Illustrated by John Tenniel Edited by Martin Gardner amp Mark Burstein W W Norton 2015 ISBN 978 0 393 24543 1 Dodgson Charles L Euclid and His Modern Rivals Macmillan 1879 Dodgson Charles L The Pamphlets of Lewis Carroll Vol 1 The Oxford Pamphlets 1993 ISBN 0 8139 1250 4 Vol 2 The Mathematical Pamphlets 1994 ISBN 0 9303 26 09 1 Vol 3 The Political Pamphlets 2001 ISBN 0 930326 14 8 Vol 4 The Logic Pamphlets 2010 ISBN 978 0 930326 25 8 Douglas Fairhurst Robert 2016 The Story of Alice Lewis Carroll and the Secret History of Wonderland Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674970762 Goodacre Selwyn 2006 All the Snarks The Illustrated Editions of the Hunting of the Snark Oxford Inky Parrot Press Graham Smith Darien 2005 Contextualising Carroll University of Wales Bangor PhD thesis Edward Guiliano 1982 Lewis Carroll a Celebration Essays on the Occasion of the 150th Anniversary of the Birth of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson C N Potter London Huxley Francis The Raven and the Writing Desk 1976 ISBN 0 06 012113 0 Kelly Richard Lewis Carroll 1990 Boston Twayne Publishers Kelly Richard ed Alice s Adventures in Wonderland 2000 Peterborough Ontario Broadviewpress Lakoff Robin T Lewis Carroll Subversive Pragmaticist 2022 Pragmatics Quarterly Publication of the International Pragmatics Association pp 367 85 Lovett Charlie Lewis Carroll Among His Books A Descriptive Catalogue of the Private Library of Charles L Dodgson 2005 ISBN 0 7864 2105 3 Richardson Joanna The Young Lewis Carroll London Max Parrish 1963 Waggoner Diane 2020 Lewis Carroll s Photography and Modern Childhood Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 19318 2 Wakeling Edward 2015 The Photographs of Lewis Carroll A Catalogue Raisonne Austin University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 76743 0 Wullschlager Jackie Inventing Wonderland ISBN 0 7432 2892 8 Also looks at Edward Lear of the nonsense verses J M Barrie Peter Pan Kenneth Grahame The Wind in the Willows and A A Milne Winnie the Pooh N N Dreaming in Pictures The Photography of Lewis Carroll Yale University Press amp SFMOMA 2004 Places Carroll firmly in the art photography tradition Over the years many retellings of Lewis Carroll s Alice in Wonderland This includes examples like Alice in Zombieland by Gena Showalter Schutze Franziska Disney in Wonderland A Comparative Analysis of Disney s Alice in Wonderland Film Adaptations from 1951 and 2010External links editLewis Carroll at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Digital collections Works by Lewis Carroll in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Lewis Carroll at Project Gutenberg nbsp Works by or about Lewis Carroll at Internet Archive Works by Lewis Carroll at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Works by Lewis Carroll at Open Library The Poems of Lewis Carroll 1 First EditionsPhysical collections Guide to Harcourt Amory collection of Lewis Carroll at Houghton Library Harvard University Lewis Carroll at the British Library Lewis Carroll online exhibition at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin Lewis Carroll Scrapbook Collection at the Library of Congress Archival material relating to Lewis Carroll UK National Archives nbsp Biographical information and scholarship Lewis Carroll at victorianweb org Contrariwise the Association for New Lewis Carroll Studies articles by leading members of the new scholarship Lewis Carroll s Shifting Reputation Archived 4 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine Lewis Carroll Logic Internet Encyclopedia of PhilosophyOther links Lewis Carroll at the Internet Book List Lewis Carroll at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Newspaper clippings about Lewis Carroll in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW The Lewis Carroll Society UK The Lewis Carroll Society of North America Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lewis Carroll amp oldid 1185518674, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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