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Chapel Allerton
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Alice’s Secrets in Wonderland

Monday, 15 February 2010, 08:00 PM - 10:00 PM

The Queens Arms

Melanie Bayley

What would Lewis Carroll’s ‘ Alice ’s Adventures in Wonderland’ be without he Cheshire Cat, the trial, the Duchess’s baby or The Mad Hatter’s Tea Party? These famous characters are missing from the original story the author told Alice Liddell and her 2 sisters during a boat trip near Oxford . What inspired these later additions?

‘Lewis Carroll’ was Charles Dodgson, a stubbornly conservative mathematician at Oxford . He valued Euclid’s ‘Elements’ as the epitome of mathematical thinking, starting with a few axioms and building complex arguments through simple, logical steps in geometry and trigonometry. But the 19th century was a turbulent time for mathematics with new concepts like imaginary numbers, symbolic logic, projective geometry and quaternions. For Dodgson this was all ‘semi-colloquial’ and therefore parodied in Alice – hence the Cheshire Cat, the Duchess’s baby and the Mad Hatter’s Tea Party – each one a critique of the new mathematics. This is a new analysis of Alice , originated by Melanie Bayley a PhD student from Oxford.

Discussion

please see Helen Crawford's review of Melanie's illuminating Alice Conversation.
http://theculturevulture.co.uk/blog/?p=4903

from my artist's perspective the mathematical formulae conversation gave rise to interesting 3 dimensional imagery in my mental landscape. I think what I liked about this discussion was the combining of creative description with mathematical conclusions - and then referenced contextually historically.
many thanks @dysconnection (for twitterers)

Katie Brown (on Friday, 05 March 2010, 11:57 AM)


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