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== Behind the scenes ==
== Behind the scenes ==
[[File:Alan Watts - On Nothingness|thumb|right|The real Alan Watts in Sausalito, lecturing about nothingness]]
{{video|Alan Watts - On Nothingness|thumb|right|The real Alan Watts in Sausalito, lecturing about nothingness}}
''Wonderland'' is so confident that the reader will know who Alan Watts is that it only casually references him. It would certainly be the case that people who were alive and aware in the 1960s would naturally know him, and perhaps even appreciate the nod to Sausalito. Younger readers, or simply those not familiar with 1960s counterculture, would possibly think that this is just a meaningless name woven into the backdrop of ''Wonderland'' to suggest a larger context — a bit of fictional "worldbuilding". As the video at right demonstrates, though, Watts was very much a real person who lived upon a grand boat called the ''Vallejo'', moored in Sausalito, from where he gave his [[lecture]]s.
''Wonderland'' is so confident that the reader will know who Alan Watts is that it only casually references him. It would certainly be the case that people who were alive and aware in the 1960s would naturally know him, and perhaps even appreciate the nod to Sausalito. Younger readers, or simply those not familiar with 1960s counterculture, would possibly think that this is just a meaningless name woven into the backdrop of ''Wonderland'' to suggest a larger context — a bit of fictional "worldbuilding". As the video at right demonstrates, though, Watts was very much a real person who lived upon a grand boat called the ''Vallejo'', moored in Sausalito, from where he gave his [[lecture]]s.



Latest revision as of 19:51, 19 February 2024

Alan Watts

Alan Watts gave lectures on Maya in Sausalito in at least January 1967. (PROSE: Wonderland)

Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]

Wonderland is so confident that the reader will know who Alan Watts is that it only casually references him. It would certainly be the case that people who were alive and aware in the 1960s would naturally know him, and perhaps even appreciate the nod to Sausalito. Younger readers, or simply those not familiar with 1960s counterculture, would possibly think that this is just a meaningless name woven into the backdrop of Wonderland to suggest a larger context — a bit of fictional "worldbuilding". As the video at right demonstrates, though, Watts was very much a real person who lived upon a grand boat called the Vallejo, moored in Sausalito, from where he gave his lectures.

Although Wonderland doesn't explain, the reference to "Maya" is not one to the Mayans, but to a philosophical concept of illusion.

External links[[edit] | [edit source]]