Topic > Research - 1438

Thesis: My article will be a critical analysis of the Alice in Wonderland book and an overview of the author. Through the story of "Alice in Wonderland" Alice sees this place as a kingdom in which she will wake up at any moment and that nothing in this place can hurt her, she sees what surrounds her as a fruit of her imagination, a mirage if you want. As the story becomes deeper and deeper in changes and outcomes, he manages to overcome incredible feats where the possibility of death is simply taking a backseat in his mind, but suddenly it comes to his attention that death is the main result in some of the actions she takes. When she realizes what is happening, Alice becomes shocked and scared because now she has to change her perception of Wonderland into a real world scenario even though some of the things, actually most of the whole story that occurs , are so ridiculous that they would completely baffle and amaze a normal person in the real world. With this new perception, she knows that she has to keep herself, the creatures and other people she entered the story with alive and safe, so her maturity level has also increased in the fact that she is almost a heroine/mother to these . creatures and people and that responsibility that she is able to accept while trying to look at herself at the same time. When the queen screams "off his head" even though no one ever dies, or gets their head cut off" (http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/alice/themes.html), I think that's when it finally hits her on target, so this is just one of the many themes of this story. Death for Alice is a second shadow, a dark and mysterious thing taken for granted that has always followed her, but it took many things or just one thing because she realized the gravity... middle of paper... ... giving up her life. So her development was a flat line of a crazy, but kind-hearted creature who would do anything for her friends and the queen. The end of the story is seen as a simple girl waking up from a very confusing, but very realistic dream, which her sister looks at with a blank look, because her imagination doesn't have to work that way Alice's Adventures in Wonderland includes an additional scene. After Alice wakes up, she tells her adventures to her sister. Alice herself runs away cheerfully, and for a moment the reader is left alone with her sister, remembering all the strange characters and strange happenings of Wonderland. Carroll uses his sister as a guide for the reader, teaching him how to appreciate Alice's imagination even if he realizes it is just a fantasy. (http://www.shmoop.com/alice-in-wonderland-looking-glass/ending.html)