Like a child who grew up, she began to transcend the world of Wonderland. The most important thing among the main ideas and themes of Alice in Wonderland is the idea raised and the influence on your point of view and favorite things. Even though children do not necessarily make sense, story events may be perfectly valid and sometimes seem interesting. When a child saw the red Queen shouting "using the head" she may tend to laugh at silly anger rather than fully understanding the inequity of discourse and the seriousness of the situation Hmm.
Dr. John Todd, a psychiatrist in the UK, first mentioned about AIWS in 1955. Todd gave this name because it is similar to the event Alice experienced from Lewis Carroll's famous novel "Alice in Wonderland". According to reports, Lewis Carroll was actually plagued by severe migraine and lilipian's hallucinations, in which things and people look smaller than they actually are. This rare neurological diagnosis may be confused with drug addiction or psychosis. In Todd 's paper he described a series of symptoms related to migraine and epilepsy. Cases of AIWS are also associated with the diagnosis of infectious mononucleosis. The patient he detailed detailed did not show signs of vision impairment or brain tumor. Most patients with AIWS report a family history of migraine or have migraine itself. AIWS patients feel that the shape and size of the whole body or part of the body has changed.
Alice Liddell influenced Lewis Carrol's "Alice in Wonderland" and "Spy Miller". She told Dodgson to talk to Dodgson when she was 10 years old on a ship with her sister (Ediths and Lorena) and Charles Dodge (also called Lewis Carroll). He told them the story of Alice. She asked her to write this book as a book she made, but she handed the manuscript to the publisher again.
Lewis Carroll wrote "Alice in Wonderland" in 1860. It was not released until later. Carol wrote a romantic poem but did not succeed. In 1864, just before Christmas, Alice in Wonderland was released. In the second year of Christmas, a famous sequel called "through mirrors" and "discovered by Alice" was released. Sir John Tanner, a famous cartoonist and artist, announced these two books. (Oxford University, p. 4) In 1876, Lewis Carroll published "Hunting Sharks". In 1889 he wrote Sylvive and Bruno. Originally it was a book called Bruno's Revenge, Carroll contributed to Judy's magazine in 1867, but the chapter "Sylvive and Bruno" attracts a lot of people's love. Old people and young people. Therefore, Carol decided to make this fairy tale sequel. The conclusion of Sylvive and Bruno is a sequel to 400 pages published in 1893