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Running Backwards: Time, Logic, and Victorian Satire in Through the Looking-Glass

From Pawn to Queen: Alice’s Identity and the Anxiety of Growing Up in Through the Looking-Glass

Who Controls the Words? Language, Nonsense, and the Politics of Meaning in Through the Looking-Glass

The Looking-Glass World: Mirror Logic and Narrative Structure in Through the Looking-Glass

“He Comes, Ever Comes”: An Essay on Gitanjali 45

The Art of Elizabethan Prose: When English Learned to Show Off

Author: ellipsis

Running Backwards: Time, Logic, and Victorian Satire in Through the Looking-Glass

One of the pleasures of reading Lewis Carroll is that his apparent nonsense almost always has a precise target. Behind the jokes about jam and birthdays, behind the backwards memory […]

June 12, 2026June 12, 2026 ellipsis essays, guides

From Pawn to Queen: Alice’s Identity and the Anxiety of Growing Up in Through the Looking-Glass

Alice begins Through the Looking-Glass as a pawn — the least powerful piece on the chessboard — and ends it as a Queen. On the surface, this is a story […]

June 12, 2026June 12, 2026 ellipsis essays, guides

Who Controls the Words? Language, Nonsense, and the Politics of Meaning in Through the Looking-Glass

One of the most famous exchanges in all of English literature happens when Alice meets Humpty Dumpty sitting on his wall. They get into an argument — not about politics […]

June 12, 2026June 12, 2026 ellipsis essays, guides

The Looking-Glass World: Mirror Logic and Narrative Structure in Through the Looking-Glass

When Lewis Carroll sat down to write the sequel to Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865), he did not simply send Alice tumbling down another rabbit hole. Instead, he invented an […]

June 12, 2026June 12, 2026 ellipsis essays, guides

“He Comes, Ever Comes”: An Essay on Gitanjali 45

The Poem That Refuses to Stand Still There is a peculiar quality to Rabindranath Tagore’s forty-fifth poem from Gitanjali (1912) — it feels less like something you read and more […]

June 9, 2026June 12, 2026 ellipsis essays, Handouts

The Art of Elizabethan Prose: When English Learned to Show Off

Before the novel, before the newspaper, before the modern essay — there was a queen, a printing press, and a group of writers who decided that English was worth taking […]

June 9, 2026June 9, 2026 ellipsis essays, guides

Why Jimmy Porter Is Still Shouting: The Relevance of Look Back in Anger Today

A Reading Guide | Look Back in Anger by John Osborne Nearly seventy years have passed since John Osborne’s play premiered at the Royal Court Theatre. The British Empire, which […]

May 28, 2026May 28, 2026 ellipsis essays, guides

Bears, Squirrels, and the Women Jimmy Can’t Stop Hurting

A Reading Guide | Look Back in Anger by John Osborne Near the end of Look Back in Anger, there’s a scene that is simultaneously tender and deeply troubling. Jimmy […]

May 28, 2026May 28, 2026 ellipsis essays, guides

The Ironing Board on Stage: Kitchen Sink Drama and Why It Changed Everything

A Reading Guide | Look Back in Anger by John Osborne Before 1956, if you bought a ticket to the theatre in London, you could expect a certain kind of […]

May 28, 2026May 28, 2026 ellipsis essays, guides

The Man Who Was Too Angry for England: Jimmy Porter and Post-War Britain

A Reading Guide | Look Back in Anger by John Osborne Picture this: it’s 1956. The Second World War ended just eleven years ago. Britain fought, won, and came home […]

May 28, 2026May 28, 2026 ellipsis essays, guides

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  • Running Backwards: Time, Logic, and Victorian Satire in Through the Looking-Glass
  • From Pawn to Queen: Alice’s Identity and the Anxiety of Growing Up in Through the Looking-Glass
  • Who Controls the Words? Language, Nonsense, and the Politics of Meaning in Through the Looking-Glass
  • The Looking-Glass World: Mirror Logic and Narrative Structure in Through the Looking-Glass
  • “He Comes, Ever Comes”: An Essay on Gitanjali 45
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