Literary Nonsense of Alice s Adventures in Wonderland. People could have a natural desire of adhering to logical principles, but some time or for the

Similar documents
Poems in Wonderland. Mary Katherine Klaybor South Bend, Indiana

Broken Arrow Public Schools 3 rd Grade Literary Terms and Elements

Alice's Adventures In Wonderland & Other Stories READ ONLINE

The Four Artistic Processes: Creating, Performing, Responding and Connecting!

Allusion brief, often direct reference to a person, place, event, work of art, literature, or music which the author assumes the reader will recognize

Famous Quotations from Alice in Wonderland

Rhetoric. Class Period: Ethos (Credibility), or ethical appeal, means convincing by the character of the

GREAT NEW ADVENTURE ADVENTURE IN WONDERLAND 100% MACHINE LANGUAGE

A 150-year-old story: Alice in Wonderland

Language Arts Literary Terms

allusion appendix assonance cause characterization characterize chronological classified ad connotation consonance arranged in order of time

Broken Arrow Public Schools 4 th Grade Literary Terms and Elements

English (Standard) and English (Advanced) Paper 1 Area of Study Discovery!

A Critical Handbook of Children's Literature

I. Introduction. I. Introduction 9

Literary Elements Allusion*

Short, humorous poems Made in 18 th century (1700s) Takes its name from a country in Ireland that was featured in an old song, Oh Will You Come Up to

LITERARY TERMS TERM DEFINITION EXAMPLE (BE SPECIFIC) PIECE

Honors English 9: Literary Elements

LEARN ITALIAN! IMPARA L'INGLESE! ALICE'S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND: IN ITALIAN AND ENGLISH BY LEWIS CARROLL

Alice's Adventures In Wonderland, 2nd Edition By Lewis Carroll, Richard Kelly

Allusion: A reference to a well-known person, place, event, literary work, or work of art to enrich the reading experience by adding meaning.

ELEMENTS OF PLOT/STORY MAP

A Doctoral Candidate's Aduentures Through the LooKing-Glass

All In A Golden Afternoon

Cornell Notes Topic/ Objective: Name:

ST. MARY'S CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL, DUBAI

MCPS Enhanced Scope and Sequence Reading Definitions

FOLKLORE AND PERSISTENCE IN LEWIS CARROLL'S ALICE'S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND Erica Lynn Ruppert

STAAR Reading Terms 5th Grade

Next Generation Literary Text Glossary

2016 Summer Assignment: Honors English 10

A person represented in a story

Literary Element. Cards

WILLY'S STORIES BY ANTHONY BROWNE DOWNLOAD EBOOK : WILLY'S STORIES BY ANTHONY BROWNE PDF

PHL 317K 1 Fall 2017 Overview of Weeks 1 5

Glossary of Literary Terms

Once Upon a Time, There Was Subjectivity

5. Aside a dramatic device in which a character makes a short speech intended for the audience but not heard by the other characters on stage

How to remove alice in wonderland quotes mad hatter cheshire cat white rabbit red queen characters book alice in wonderland quotes mad hatter

Literature: An Introduction to Reading and Writing

LANGUAGE ARTS GRADE 3

Reading Strategies for Literature

*Due: directly before you take this exam

Word Log. Word I don t know: Page: What I think it means: Word I don t know: Page: What I think it means: Word I don t know: Page:

Reading Assessment Vocabulary Grades 6-HS

Prose. What You Should Already Know. Wri tten in Pa ragra ph s

Number: 473 Title: Critical Approaches to Children's Literature Units: G

TUTOR WORLD ASHFORD SAMPLE TEST ENGLISH. Multiple-choice SAMPLE TEST 1

Pre-conference workshop with Lars Elleström (Linneaus University) Daniella Aguiar & João Queiroz (orgs.)

Novel Study Literary Devices, Elements, Techniques, and Terms

Curriculum Guide for 4th Grade Reading Unit 1: Exploits 6 weeks. Objectives Methods Resources Assessment the students will

Standard L A T E X Report

Activity 1 - What is Nonsense?

Incoming 11 th grade students Summer Reading Assignment

Creating Picture Books: a student work ebook

Handouts. Teaching Elements of Personal Narrative Texts Gateway Resource TPNT Texas Education Agency/The University of Texas System

Wonderland, The Story of the Amulet, The Wizard of Earthsea, The Hobbit, Watership Down.

Alice in Wonderland. Great Illustrated Classics Reading Comprehension Worksheets. Sample file

The Complete Alice In Wonderland By Erica Awano, Lewis Carroll

Alice's Adventures In Wonderland

Figurative Language Examples For Bud Not Buddy

not to be republished NCERT Why? Alice in Wonderland UNIT-4

Types of Literature. Short Story Notes. TERM Definition Example Way to remember A literary type or

Alice in Wonderland. A Selection from Alice in Wonderland. Visit for thousands of books and materials.

Language & Literature Comparative Commentary

Figurative Language In Wonder By Rj Palacio

The character who struggles or fights against the protagonist. The perspective from which the story was told in.

Mr. Christopher Mock

Your web browser (Safari 7) is out of date. For more security, comfort and the best experience on this site: Update your browser Ignore

PLAY GUIDE. Alice in Wonderland. Presented on the LCT Main Stage: Dec , 2016 On tour: Aug. 29, Jan. 27, 2017

Comprehensions. Workbook 1. for CEM. learn. develop. succeed. Fully classroom tested by Teachitright pupils - and approved by parents

Summer Reading Assignment: Honors English I Harun and the Sea of Stories by Salman Rushdie ISBN:

English. English 80 Basic Language Skills. English 82 Introduction to Reading Skills. Students will: English 84 Development of Reading and Writing

theme title characters traits motivations conflict setting draw conclusions inferences Essential Vocabulary Summary Background Information

CD SOUNDTRACK SPIN IT, MASTER SOUND MIXER!

Broken Arrow Public Schools 5 th Grade Literary Terms and Elements

DOWNLOAD OR READ : QUOTATIONS STORIES PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

English Unit 12.3: Challenging Perspectives. Enduring Understandings. Essential Questions. Common Tasks

Roland Barthes s The Death of the Author essay provides a critique of the way writers

EPISODE 8: CROCODILE TOURISM. Hello. Welcome again to Study English, IELTS preparation. I m Margot Politis.

Sixth Grade 101 LA Facts to Know

100 Best-Loved Poems. Chapter-by-Chapter Study Guide. (Ed.) Philip Smith

a story or visual image with a second distinct meaning partially hidden behind it literal or visible meaning Allegory

Growing Up in Wonderland Alice s Coming-of-Age Story

A Critical Handbook of Children's Literature

Correlation to Common Core State Standards Books A-F for Grade 5

1. dactyl - A three-syllable metrical foot consisting of a heavy stress. 2. Dadaism - A literary movement ( ) that flouted conventional

1/25/2012. Common Core Georgia Performance Standards Grades English Language Arts. Susan Jacobs ELA Program Specialist

Cite. Infer. to determine the meaning of something by applying background knowledge to evidence found in a text.

English 7 Gold Mini-Index of Literary Elements

Literary Elements & Terms. Some of the basics that every good story must have

The Grammardog Guide to The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde

Houghton Mifflin Reading 2001 Houghton Mifflin Company Grade Two. correlated to Chicago Public Schools Reading/Language Arts

The Effects of Study Condition Preference on Memory and Free Recall LIANA, MARISSA, JESSI AND BROOKE

Independent Reading due Dates* #1 December 2, 11:59 p.m. #2 - April 13, 11:59 p.m.

I say what I mean, I mean what I say A curiouser and curiouser condition of language

LEWIS CARROLL PHANTASMAGORIA PDF

Allegory. Convention. Soliloquy. Parody. Tone. A work that functions on a symbolic level

MUSIC. Listening and Appraising component. GCSE (9 1) Candidate style answers. For first teaching in 2016.

Transcription:

Last Name: 1 Name: Instructor: Course: Date: Literary Nonsense of Alice s Adventures in Wonderland Acts, motivations, and reactions might often have the leitmotif of absolute absurdity. People could have a natural desire of adhering to logical principles, but some time or for the most part, they do not demonstrate logical explanations. Such a feature of humankind s existence and function is hyperbolized and presented within literary works, which include stories, novels, poems, and nursery rhymes. Deliberate ignorance of logic, which at the same time is based on logical knowledge, generates a separate literary genre defined as literary nonsense. Works performed in this genre can amaze the reader who thinks within the framework of the usual cause-effect linear relations. They also can present a unique niche of understanding of habitual life situations and the psychology of existence under the guise of works aimed at children. The most prominent example of literary nonsense is the novel Alice s Adventures in Wonderland written by Lewis Carroll, and it will be used as a source to analyze and comprehend the genre. Regardless of the second word in the definition, literary nonsense is not absurd prose or poetry; any work should have a grounded explanation. According to Michael Heyman (para. 6), the classification of literary nonsense should begin with an understanding that a work has a balance between sense and non-sense. Good nonsense implies that a reader is invited to make his or her own interpretation within the balance which is observed owing to formal structure and grammar rules. Similarly to the structure of any prose, Alice s Adventures in

Last Name: 2 Wonderland has a chronological sequence of events with a beginning, the development of the events, and the denouement. Alice s adventures begin with her being tired of her sister, seeing the White Rabbit, and following him in a rush (Carroll 7-8). The development of the events includes her attempts to return to her sister while meeting new characters and trying to help them if she has such an opportunity. The denouement is the final episode in which Alice learns that her adventure has been her curious dream (Carroll 107). In this way, the reader has a clear understanding of the essence of all events: they are a dream, and dreams might be deprived of logic and sense. The prominent feature of literary nonsense is the use of language. According to Anna Barton, authors in this genre can use language as a material thing, and they can introduce puns as a means of demonstrating the ease with which language may be used (Heyman para. 13). Moreover, a pun is a convenient tool to present a humorous motif within a story because of the peculiarities of the English language, including consonance and similar spellings of words that have different meanings. The conversation held between Alice and the Duchess will be used as an example: You see the earth takes twenty-four hours to turn round on its axis - Talking of axes, said the Duchess, chop off her head! (Carroll 52). The little girl Alice is proud to demonstrate her knowledge on the subject difficult for little girls; she uses the word axis, which is an imaginary but fixed line. The Duchess either mishears or misunderstands the word and mentions the word that is familiar to her, which is an ax in the plural. Apart from the ironically humorous subtext, one can consider the pun as a means of demonstrating the Duchess unhealthy obsession with axes and chopping off someone s head.

Last Name: 3 Another example that should be mentioned is the pun based on the consonance of a word with the rapid pronunciation of two other words: The master was an old Turtle - we used to call him Tortoise - Why did you call him Tortoise, if he wasn t one? Alice asked. We called him Tortoise because he taught us, said the Mock Turtle angrily. Really you are very dull! (Carroll 81). Non-native speakers might find it difficult to understand the reasoning behind Mock Turtle s words, but it is indeed simple and even logical. One of the transcriptions for tortoise is ˈtɔːtəs/; at this point, one should consider the transcription for taught + us: /tɔːt + ʌs/. In this way, the reader has yet another logical explanation for the illogical thing presented through the pages of Alice s Adventures in Wonderland. It might seem that literary nonsense does not strictly adhere to logic. The mentioned assumption is not true: authors play with rules of logic, but they do not deny it, which is another element of balance aimed at helping the reader understand the work of this genre (Heyman para. 2). Lewis Carroll is meticulous in the construction of puns and wordplay; he makes them meaningless and completely logical simultaneously. As an example, it is worth referring to the dialogue between the White Rabbit and the King of Heart during the trial over the Knave: Where shall I begin, please your Majesty? he asked. Begin at the beginning, the King said, very gravely, and go on till you come to the end: then stop (Carroll 103). At the surface, the dialogue sounds absurd: the beginning and the end are abstract things, and they have no clear boundaries. Nonetheless, the second analysis of the chosen fragment reveals logical simplicity: everything will be the beginning if a person starts talking, and when the words

Last Name: 4 end, it will be the marking point to stop. One can consider Alice s Adventures in Wonderland as collections of different puns and wordplay which present multifaceted nonsense at the surface and meaning behind the lines. At the same time, Carroll does not limit himself to nonsense in structuring the essence of what he wants to say; the author literally uses language as a thing and gives material form to words. An important note that should be made here is that the conversation also contains a pun. Alice recalls that the Mouse promised to tell a story, and later Carroll introduces one of the puns based on the vocal consonance of words tale and tail. In this way, the Mouse s tale is verbally constructed in such a way to resemble the material form of a real tail. As a matter of fact, this approach does not have any sense except for emphasizing the senselessness. Alice s Adventures in Wonderland presents meaninglessness based on rules of logic; thus, it has become a fine example of literary nonsense. In addition, one can even consider that Lewis Carroll established strict principles of the genre for the following generations. Within the book, it is possible to distinguish the balance between the sense and non-sense created with the help of formal rules related to prose s structure. There is a hint at the beginning of the story leading to the logical outcome in the denouement: all the nonsense was a dream. The structure is the hollow frame, and the language becomes a thing that fills it. Lewis Carroll carefully coined every pun and wordplay, and the analysis of each of them could reveal the simple and indestructible rules of logic. It is also the necessary balance to provide the reader with a quality book written as literary nonsense, and Alice s Adventures in Wonderland is worthy of being the first work to read in this genre.

Last Name: 5 Works Cited Carroll, Lewis. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Reprinted ed. [PDF], Somerville, MA: Candlewick, 2003. Heyman, Michel. Definitions of Nonsense Literature. Gromboolia: The Nonsense Art and Literature Site, n.d., http://www.nonsenseliterature.com/nonsense-resources/definitionsof-nonsense-literature/. Accessed 12 Aug. 2018.