Graias — Alice

By [Author Name] An exploration of shared vision, fractured identity, and the power of looking

Alice, famously, struggles with speech in Wonderland. She recites “How Doth the Little Busy Bee” only to have it come out as “How Doth the Little Crocodile.” Her words are eaten and transformed. The creatures of Wonderland constantly interrupt, mishear, and reinterpret her. She lacks a stable “tooth” — a fixed voice of authority. graias alice

On the surface, they seem unrelated: one is a grotesque crone, the other a golden-haired archetype of childhood innocence. But beneath the surface, — one about the nature of seeing, sharing, and surviving absurdity. I. One Eye, Many Worlds The Graeae possess a single eye. They pass it back and forth. Only one sister sees at a time; the others are blind, yet still present. This is not just a physical deformity — it is a radical metaphor for shared consciousness . “They have but one eye and one tooth between them, and they pass these from one to another as they need them.” — Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca Alice, too, experiences a fractured, unreliable vision of reality. In Wonderland, her own body changes size, making her perspective on the world comically unstable. She cannot trust what she sees: a grinning cat disappears leaving only its smile; a Mad Hatter’s watch tells the day of the month but not the hour. Alice’s vision is collectively distorted — the creatures around her each hold a piece of the “truth,” but none has the whole eye. By [Author Name] An exploration of shared vision,

In Victorian England, another girl stood at a different kind of threshold. — not a hero with a sword, but a child with curiosity — fell down a rabbit hole into a world where size, logic, and identity shifted without warning. She lacks a stable “tooth” — a fixed