Alice In Wonderland Synthesis Essay

1210 Words3 Pages

In Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, young Alice finds herself in a world that she does not really understand. Dazed and confused, Alice must rely heavily on her wits in order to overcome the most absurd of tasks. Because there are many different ways to read this book, many people will have you believe that there is a hidden meaning within the text of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. Often times these “hidden meanings” involve some sort of conspiracy regarding the politics or social agenda of the time. I do not believe that this book should be read in such a manner. Lewis Carroll wrote this book with the intent of providing a child, a story to help her understand the struggles of growing up. When Alice first encounters the …show more content…

Through their growth and maturity, children come across situations/dilemmas that they must assess and overcome in the same manner as an adult. In order to demonstrate this, Carroll introduces a chain of events, which involve problems that children must deal with whenever they encounter new milestone in their development. As the confusing tale of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland develops, each time her body experiences a change, Alice is forced to confront an individual aspect of herself through a conflict that arises from her encounter with another character. Prior to each encounter, Alice’s body had been altered with the ingestion of some normal teatime snack. Prompting Alice to deal with a character or situation in the same manner that a young child learns to socialize in the real …show more content…

Things in Wonderland are indeed strange, even stranger are its residents that range from woodland creatures to mythological beings. Part of the process of growing up, requires learning how to interact with others without being rude or condescending. In her encounters with the residents of Wonderland, Alice unconsciously offends some of the characters she meets by not being aware of what she was saying. She insults the garden critters when she talks of her cat, and she offends the caterpillar when she mentions how awful it is to be “three inches tall. Her conversations with these characters are examples of interactions that children would experience as they grow up. Alice noticed how easily it was to offend some of the people n wonderland, and began refraining from using language that would somehow infuriate others. More specifically, she refrains from using the Word “dinner” and talking about her

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