What is the Alice surrounded by Wonderland Theme?


Answers:
Major Themes:

*Growth into Adulthood*
This theme is central to both books. Alice's adventures parallel the journey from childhood to manhood. She comes into numerous new situations in which adaptability is certainly necessary for success. She shows marked progress throughout the course of the book; surrounded by the beginning, she can barely maintain ample composure to keep herself from crying. By the end of the novel, she is self-possessed and competent to hold her own against the most baffling Wonderland logic.


*Size change*
Closely connected to the above theme, size change is another recurring concept. The dramatic change in size hint at the radical change the body undergoes during adolescence. The key, once again, is flexibility. Alice's size changes also bring about a change contained by perspective, and she sees the world from a very different view. In the later trial scene, her growth into a giant reflects her interior growth. She becomes a much stronger, self-possessed person, competent to speak out against the nonsensical proceedings of the trial.


Death
This theme is even more present in the second Alice book, Through the Looking Glass. Alice frequently makes reference to her own death without knowing it. Childhood is a state of peril in Carroll's picture: children are quite vulnerable, and the world presents many danger. Another aspect of death is its inevitability. Since the Alice books are at root about change (the transition from childhood to womanhood, the passage of time), mortality is inescapable as a theme. Death is the final step of this process of growth. While death is solely hinted at in the first book, the second book is saturated with reference to mortality and macabre humor.


*Games/ Learning the Rules*
Every new encounter is something of a game for Alice; near are rules to learn, and consequences for learning or not learning those rules. Games are a constant portion of life in Wonderland, from the Caucus race to the strange croquet meeting to the fact that the royal court is a living deck of cards. And every new social encounter is like a team game, in that there are bizarre, apparently arbitrary rules that Alice has to master. Learning the rules is a metaphor for the adaptation to new social situations that every child makes as she grows older. Mastering respectively challenge, Alice grows wiser and more adaptable as time goes on.


*Language and Logic/Illogic*
Carroll delight in puns. The Alice books are chockfull of games with language, to the reader's hearten and Alice's confusion. The games often point out some inconsistency or slipperiness of language in broad and English in particular. The books point out the pains and advantages of language. Language is a source of elation and adaptability; it can also be a source of great confusion.
Just as baffling is the bizarre logic at work in Wonderland. Every creature can justify the most nonsensical behavior, and their arguments for themselves are often fairly complex. Their strange reasoning is another source of delight for the reader and goad for Alice. She has to learn to discern between unusual logic and utter nonsense.


Theme Analysis

Alice surrounded by Wonderland is a coming of age story. It is the growth of Alice from an undisciplined child to a wise young woman. The principle arrangement of this growth is two-parted. First Alice must learn that rules are essential to civil, grown life. Then she must learn that if rules are adhered to blindly, and minus a merciful sense of justice, then society becomes worse than childish anarchy, it become a tyranny. These truths are played out in the metaphors of children's games and rhymes.

In the end, Alice must overcome the nonsense of the young-looking and the old before she truly understands what manhood is all about Source(s): http://www.gradesaver.com/alice-in-wonde…
http://www.novelguide.com/aliceinwonderl…
my 2nd personality
Growing up and how it is strange.


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