Monday, December 8, 2008
Quotes About Literature
About one's choice of words
"Then you should say what you mean," the March Hare went on."I do, " Alice hastily replied; "at least I mean what I say, that's the same thing, you know.""Not the same thing a bit!" said the Hatter. "Why, you might just as well say that "I see what I eat" is the same thing as "I eat what I see!" Alice in Wonderland.
"When I use a word," Humpty Dumpty said, in a rather scornful tone, "it means just what I choose it to mean - neither more nor less.""The question is," said Alice, "whether you can make words mean so many different things.""The question is," said Humpty Dumpty, "which is to be master - that's all."Through the Looking Glass.
About children's literature
“Good children's literature appeals not only to the child in the adult, but to the adult in the child”
About literature in general
It takes a great deal of history to produce a little literature. Ernest Hemingway
Learning why one great book is just like every other great book is the key to understanding literature. John Moschitta
All that non-fiction can do is answer questions. It's fiction's business to ask them. Richard Hughes
Term Paper
When it came time to finally decide on a topic for this term paper, I was experiencing some very intense issues of indecisiveness. First I wanted to write about portals and where they lead to and why they are needed. Then I thought I might be more interested in the move from innocence to experience. But then again I realized that the notion of nonsense and the compelling intrigue of magic left me even more confused and stressed as to what I really wanted to focus on for my final “observation” almost of the material in the class. Finally, I decided on a topic that was broad enough to encompass each of the aforementioned elements, yet still complex enough and focused to help me refrain from too many tangents, not that that is a bad thing. Therefore, I have entitled my paper:
Alice versus Dorothy versus Lyra; Child versus Adolescent versus Adult
Falling down rabbit holes, getting caught up in tornados, cutting through time, each resulting in experiencing a new world be it a nonsensical land of backwards and portmanteau or a colorful land with yellow brick roads and emerald cities or a world or the underworld where the dead need to be set free. To say that Alice represents the child, Dorothy the adolescent, and Lyra the adult is to say that despite each books similarity to the others, there lies an obvious difference in the lasting impression and magnitude of the experience each girl undertakes. This difference and the defense for my title, lies mainly in each girl’s response to the “dream” that consumed them and took away their reality.
Nearly everything about Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass helps emphasize the notion that Alice represents the child when compared to the other two females. From her seemingly juvenile portal (a rabbit’s hole) to the nonsensical lessons she tries to recite that come out “how doth the little crocodile” and “Twinkle, twinkle, little bat” the evidence of pure childhood imagination exudes from every page. Even Alice’s contemplation over whether she is the same at a different height and if not than whom is she during the second chapter remains unresolved. Children often leave complex thoughts unanswered after trying frustratingly to come to a “realistic” conclusion. The question as to what is a child and where is the differentiating change I feel is best answered in Phillip Pullman’s notion of Lyra in His Dark Materials as the second Eve. That is to suggest that perhaps the fall occurs because of the acquirement of knowledge more so than sin.
If that is the case, which I do believe it is, then the move from innocence to experience and child to adult is accompanied by the move from ignorance to knowledge. For that reason, I believe that although the end of Through the Looking Glass leaves Alice asking many good questions, she is unable to produce an answer to her curiosity as to “Which dreamed it?” This seems to suggest that although Alice may have experienced Wonderland, little knowledge was gained from her adventures. Her assertion that she prefers the dream world to the “real” one reveals how her childhood fantasies still live freely within her with little to no limitations.
Dorothy on the other hand undergoes a few more life altering experiences in her voyage through the wonderful Land of Oz. She discovers a sort of self awareness much like that we acquire during puberty or adolescence. Throughout her quest for home, Dorothy stumbles across various other unaware characters in search of their brain, (the scarecrow), their heart, (the tin man), and their courage (the cowardly lion). However, in the final scenes of The Wizard of Oz, after all the others have discovered their missing parts, Dorothy is left with a very superficial realization that “there’s no place like home” and she would rather stay in the world of reality. Her experience and knowledge gain does not venture much further past the top most layer of understanding that is the layer of self awareness. Although important in reaching adulthood, I do not think that this alone can qualify one as an adult. Therefore, Dorothy is the adolescent of the group.
However, the experiences and knowledge demanded of Lyra in His Dark Materials are more along the lines of sexual awareness, self sacrifice, and an understanding of the bigger picture. Through her relationship with Will and her sacrifice of that relationship, I believe that Lyra gains almost too much knowledge for her young age as she transcends rapidly into adulthood. For that reason, I believe that Lyra represents the woman in the equation that was initially established. Her dream can never again happen, or so it seems.
As much as I would like to think that the majority of the women in the world are dwelling in Wonderland with Alice, the tragic truth remains that there are far too many Lyras that have to assume a role to quick for themselves or are forced to make decisions they almost feel unprepared for. And unfortunately, not everyone’s knowledge is of the same scope and magnitude as Lyra’s and can end up making the “right” decision. As for me, I would much rather join Alice at the mad tea parties or even Dorothy on the yellow brick road than have to stand there and watch as Lyra says goodbye to her one true love. That is far too adult for me.
Our Wizard of Oz Project
Faerie Tale Theater
Some of my all time favorites are of course The Little Mermaid and thanks to Jessi mentioning it in class a while back, she helped me remember this fantastic series. I also am obsessed with The Twelve Dancing Princesses mainly because I wanted to walk through the portal they do and cross the lake to dance the night away as a young aspiring ballerina. Well, I left ballet school because of the horrid instructor but I can still go dance with them whenever I want thanks to the stories, the movies, and my imagination.
Here is a link to a youtube video of the first scene in The Little Mermaid:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h9Q6EsSQY0k
Rapunzel
The Story of the Three Bears
A Dream is a Wish Your Heart Makes
Alice in Wonderland = Phoebe in Wonderland
Phillip Pullman and His Dark Materials
East of the Sun and West of the Moon
The Story of the Three Little Pigs
Thought Process Behind my Displacement
- The title: Frosch means frog in German and sometimes it is a well in stories that the princess loses her ball in and sometimes it is a spring, hence wellspring
- chemistry lab, formaldehyde: hinting to dissection and prescence of frogs
- rose perfume, glod locks, rose lips, unnoticed beauty rest, Sarah: I wanted to try and incorporate as many of the general princess stereotypes as I could. Even the name Sarah means princess
- gold heart shaped compact: the princess loses a gold ball, in place a gold compact with a circular mirror inside.
- Name of school and Sarah's name: semi-royalty in the school
- purple latex gloves: royalty
- fiddling with compact: open and close it like tossing a ball up and down
- Jacob Frosch: Jacob for the author, Frosch for frog
- vintage video game: frogger
- Louis Vuitton purse: royalty
- hopped and hobbled: frog like motions
- "I can fix it for you": offering
- proposal, terms: Frog will only retrieve ball under certain conditions
- dissecting frogs: Hint to the frog prince storyline
- Sarah chooses Aurora: Goes back on her promise
- smacks Jacob: symbolizes throwing him against the wall
- not half bad: turns into a prince
- completely mutilated frog: Jacob's years as an outcast were over and he was no longer a frog
So, I hope that helped explain a little more how it does actually fit into the plot of The Frog Prince quite nicely if I may say so myself.
The Frosch and the Wellspring; My Displaced Fairytale
Displaced Fairytales
Adam - The 3 Little Pigs
Dustin - Beauty and the Beast
Cassie - Hansel and Gretal
Sam - The Little Match Girl
Rebecca - Jack and the Beanstalk
Katie - Sleeping Beauty
Aaron - Hansel and Gretal
Erin - The Little Mermaid
Lynn - Beauty and the Beast
Montana - Little Red Riding Hood
Kathleen - Little Mermaid
Chris - Goldilocks and the 3 Bears
Ryan - Bluebeard
Jesse - Little Mermaid
Julie - Beauty and the Beast
Stephanie - Rumpelstilskin
Aaron - Beauty and the Beast
Kalli - Beauty and the Beast
Lisa - Hansel and Gretal
Brett - Humpty Dumpty
Kyle - The Princess and the Pea
Kayla - Sleeping Beauty
Cheryl - Hansel and Gretal
Raquel - Little Mermaid
Emily - Little Mermaid
Ben - Little Red Riding Hood
Taylor - Little Red Riding Hood
Brittani - Little Red Riding Hood
Ashley - Rapunzel
Ronnie - 3 Billy Goats Gruff
John - Bluebeard
Jill - Cinderella
Jessie - Little Mermaid
Sutter - The 3 Little Pigs
Hans Christian Anderson
- "The Emperor's New Clothes"
- "The Little Match Girl"
- "The Princess and the Pea"
- "The Ugly Duckling"
- "The Little Mermaid"
Key Facts:
- Has written over 150 tales
- stingy with the use of "happily ever after"
Quotes:
- “Every man's life is a fairy tale written by God's fingers”
- “Where words fail, music speaks.”
- “Being born in a duck yard does not matter, if only you are hatched from a swan's egg.”
- “Most of the people who will walk after me will be children, so make the beat keep time with short steps.”
- “You say you have thousands of my days; but I have thousands of moments, in which I can be merry and happy [the ephemera replying to the oak tree].”
Favorite Chapter in Alice in Wonderland
Six Impossible Things Before Breakfast
- Enjoy a brisk walk around the lake
- Drink a cup of hot chocolate by the fireplace
- Watch a pick me up cartoon such as a fairytale
- Relax with a glass of wine in a hot bubble bath
- Look forward to a day without confrontation
- Acknowledge that I am all caught up in my classes
"Alice laughed: "There's no use trying," she said; "one can't believe impossible things.""I daresay you haven't had much practice," said the Queen. "When I was younger, I always did it for half an hour a day. Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast."Alice in Wonderland.
Six Degrees of Seperation - Alice and Oz
Hans My Hedgehog
- rash promise (Jeptha's daughter)
- transformation of the beast
- number 3
- sacrificial child
- passing of property
- husband and wife can't have children
- monster baby
- desperation
- innermonster
- parent hating child
- lost in the fores found mysterious house
- year and a day (language formulas)
- isolation (black sheep)
- relationship with human and animal
- beast husband (marriage)
- Chaucer's Canterbury Tales - If you want to be happy for the rest of your life, never make a pretty woman your wife.
Here is a link to the song by Jimmy Soul that fully embraces this theory:
My Book and Heart Shall Never Part
My All-Time Favorite Fairytale
I have always loved Ariel in The Little Mermaid whether it be the Disney version that is far to sweet, or the true Anderson version that we see in Tatar's collection. Here is a beautiful statue of her that I found.
Possible Term Paper Topics
There are so many different things I would love to write about and research for childrens' literature.
- Portals
- innocence to experience
- nonsense
- magic
- didacticism
- what is a child?
Who knows what I will decide to write on in the future?
Snow White
Charles Perrault
- "Cinderella, or the Little Glass Slipper"
- "Bluebeard"
- "Donkeyskin"
- "Master Cat, or Puss in Boots"
- "Tom Thumb"
- The Prince, charmed with these words, and much more with the manner in which they were spoken, knew not how to show his joy and gratitude; he assured her that he loved her better than he did himself.
"To wait so long/And want a man refined and strong/Is not at all uncommon. And yet to wait one hundred years/Without a tear, without a care/Makes for a very rare woman. So here our tale appears to show/How marriage deferred/Brings joy unheard/Nothing lost after a century or so. But others love with more ardor/And wed quickly out of passion/Whatever they do/I won’t deplore/Nor shall I preach a lesson."
What is a child? What is a book? What is nature?
A book is that which often affords that experience.
Nature is that which offers an escape from that experience back to childhood.
The Brothers Grimm
Works in Maria Tatar's Collection:
- "Little Red Riding Hood"
- "Hansel and Gretal"
- "Snow White"
- "Sleeping Beauty"
- "Rapunzel"
- "The Frog King, or Iron Heinrich"
- "Rumpelstiltskin"
Here is a link to the trailer of the 2005 movie entitled The Brothers Grimm:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W3QkwDld1d4