01-Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
01-Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
01-Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
Lewis Carroll
Context
Lewis Carroll was the pseudonym of Reverend Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, a lecturer in
mathematics at Christ Church, Oxford, who lived from 1832 to 1898. Carrolls physical deformities,
partial deafness, and irrepressible stammer made him an unlikely candidate for producing one of the
most popular and enduring childrens fantasies in the English language. Carrolls unusual
appearance caused him to behave awkwardly around other adults, and his students at Oxford saw
him as a stuffy and boring teacher. He held strict religious beliefs, serving as a deacon in the
Anglican Church for many years and briefly considering becoming a minister. Underneath Carrolls
awkward exterior, however, lay a brilliant and imaginative artist. A gifted amateur photographer, he
took numerous portraits of children throughout his adulthood. Carrolls keen grasp of mathematics
and logic inspired the linguistic humor and witty wordplay in his stories. Additionally, his unique
understanding of childrens minds allowed him to compose imaginative fiction that appealed to
young people.
Carroll felt shy and reserved around adults but became animated and lively around children. His
crippling stammer melted away in the company of children as he told them his elaborately
nonsensical stories. Carroll discovered his gift for storytelling in his own youth when he served as
the unofficial family entertainer for his five younger sisters and three younger brothers. He staged
performances and wrote the bulk of the fiction in the family magazine. As an adult, Carroll continued
to prefer the companionship of children to adults and tended to favor little girls. Over the course of
his lifetime he made numerous child friends whom he wrote to frequently and often mentioned in his
diaries.
In 1856, Carroll became close with the Liddell children and met the girl who would become the
inspiration for Alice, the protagonist of his two most famous books. It was in that year that classics
scholar Henry George Liddell accepted an appointment as Dean of Christ Church, one of the
colleges that comprise Oxford University, and brought his three daughters to live with him at Oxford.
Lorina, Alice, and Edith Liddell quickly became Carrolls favorite companions and photographic
subjects. During their frequent afternoon boat trips on the river, Carroll told the Liddells fanciful tales.
Alice quickly became Carrolls favorite of the three girls, and he made her the subject of the stories
that would later becameAlices Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass. Almost
Plot Overview
Alice sits on a riverbank on a warm summer day, drowsily reading over her sisters shoulder, when
she catches sight of a White Rabbit in a waistcoat running by her. The White Rabbit pulls out a
pocket watch, exclaims that he is late, and pops down a rabbit hole. Alice follows the White Rabbit
down the hole and comes upon a great hallway lined with doors. She finds a small door that she
opens using a key she discovers on a nearby table. Through the door, she sees a beautiful garden,
and Alice begins to cry when she realizes she cannot fit through the door. She finds a bottle marked
DRINK ME and downs the contents. She shrinks down to the right size to enter the door but cannot
enter since she has left the key on the tabletop above her head. Alice discovers a cake marked EAT
ME which causes her to grow to an inordinately large height. Still unable to enter the garden, Alice
begins to cry again, and her giant tears form a pool at her feet. As she cries, Alice shrinks and falls
into the pool of tears. The pool of tears becomes a sea, and as she treads water she meets a
Mouse. The Mouse accompanies Alice to shore, where a number of animals stand gathered on a
bank. After a Caucus Race, Alice scares the animals away with tales of her cat, Dinah, and finds
herself alone again.
Alice meets the White Rabbit again, who mistakes her for a servant and sends her off to fetch his
things. While in the White Rabbits house, Alice drinks an unmarked bottle of liquid and grows to the
size of the room. The White Rabbit returns to his house, fuming at the now-giant Alice, but she swats
him and his servants away with her giant hand. The animals outside try to get her out of the house
by throwing rocks at her, which inexplicably transform into cakes when they land in the house. Alice
The Knave of Hearts stands trial for stealing the Queens tarts. The King of Hearts leads the
proceedings, and various witnesses approach the stand to give evidence. The Mad Hatter and the
Cook both give their testimony, but none of it makes any sense. The White Rabbit, acting as a
herald, calls Alice to the witness stand. The King goes nowhere with his line of questioning, but takes
encouragement when the White Rabbit provides new evidence in the form of a letter written by the
Knave. The letter turns out to be a poem, which the King interprets as an admission of guilt on the
part of the Knave. Alice believes the note to be nonsense and protests the Kings interpretation. The
Queen becomes furious with Alice and orders her beheading, but Alice grows to a huge size and
knocks over the Queens army of playing cards.
All of a sudden, Alice finds herself awake on her sisters lap, back at the riverbank. She tells her
sister about her dream and goes inside for tea as her sister ponders Alices adventures.
Character List
Alice - The seven-year-old protagonist of the story. Alice believes that the world is orderly and
stable, and she has an insatiable curiosity about her surroundings. Wonderland challenges and
frustrates her perceptions of the world.
Read an in-depth analysis of Alice.
The White Rabbit - The frantic, harried Wonderland creature that originally leads Alice to
Wonderland. The White Rabbit is figure of some importance, but he is manic, timid, and occasionally
aggressive.
The Queen of Hearts - The ruler of Wonderland. The Queen is severe and domineering, continually
screaming for her subjects to be beheaded.
Read an in-depth analysis of The Queen of Hearts.
The Caterpillar - A Wonderland creature. The Caterpillar sits on a mushroom, smokes a hookah,
and treats Alice with contempt. He directs Alice to the magic mushroom that allows her to shrink and
grow.
The Mad Hatter - A small, impolite hatter who lives in perpetual tea-time. The Mad Hatter enjoys
frustrating Alice.
The March Hare - The Mad Hatters tea-time companion. The March Hare takes great pleasure in
frustrating Alice.
The Dormouse - The Mad Hatter and March Hares companion. The Dormouse sits at the tea table
and drifts in and out of sleep.
The Gryphon - A servant to the Queen who befriends Alice. The Gryphon escorts Alice to see the
Mock Turtle.
The Mock Turtle - A turtle with the head of a calf. The Mock Turtle is friendly to Alice but is
exceedingly sentimental and self-absorbed.
Alices sister - The only character whom Alice interacts with outside of Wonderland. Alices sister
daydreams about Alices adventures as the story closes.
The Knave of Hearts - An attendant to the King and Queen. The Knave has been accused of
stealing the Queens tarts.
The Mouse - The first Wonderland creature that Alice encounters. The Mouse is initially frightened
of Alice and her talk about her pet cat, and eventually tells the story of Fury and the Mouse that
foreshadows the Knave of Hearts trial.
Alice
Alice is a sensible prepubescent girl from a wealthy English family who finds herself in a strange
world ruled by imagination and fantasy. Alice feels comfortable with her identity and has a strong
sense that her environment is comprised of clear, logical, and consistent rules and features. Alices
familiarity with the world has led one critic to describe her as a disembodied intellect. Alice displays
great curiosity and attempts to fit her diverse experiences into a clear understanding of the world.
Alice approaches Wonderland as an anthropologist, but maintains a strong sense of noblesse oblige
that comes with her class status. She has confidence in her social position, education, and the
Victorian virtue of good manners. Alice has a feeling of entitlement, particularly when comparing
herself to Mabel, whom she declares has a poky little house, and no toys. Additionally, she flaunts
Themes
Themes are the fundamental and often universal ideas explored in a literary work.
Motifs
Motifs are recurring structures, contrasts, or literary devices that can help to develop and inform the
texts major themes.
Dream
Alices Adventures in Wonderland takes place in Alices dream, so that the characters and
phenomena of the real world mix with elements of Alices unconscious state. The dream motif
explains the abundance of nonsensical and disparate events in the story. As in a dream, the
narrative follows the dreamer as she encounters various episodes in which she attempts to interpret
her experiences in relationship to herself and her world. Though Alices experiences lend themselves
to meaningful observations, they resist a singular and coherent interpretation.
Subversion
Alice quickly discovers during her travels that the only reliable aspect of Wonderland that she can
count on is that it will frustrate her expectations and challenge her understanding of the natural order
of the world. In Wonderland, Alice finds that her lessons no longer mean what she thought, as she
botches her multiplication tables and incorrectly recites poems she had memorized while in
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Language
Carroll plays with linguistic conventions in Alices Adventures in Wonderland, making use of puns
and playing on multiple meanings of words throughout the text. Carroll invents words and
expressions and develops new meanings for words. Alices exclamation Curious and curiouser!
suggests that both her surroundings and the language she uses to describe them expand beyond
expectation and convention. Anything is possible in Wonderland, and Carrolls manipulation of
language reflects this sense of unlimited possibility.
Alice uses these words throughout her journey to describe phenomena she has trouble explaining.
Though the words are generally interchangeable, she usually assigns curious and confusingto
experiences or encounters that she tolerates. She endures is the experiences that are curious or
confusing, hoping to gain a clearer picture of how that individual or experience functions in the world.
When Alice declares something to be nonsense, as she does with the trial in Chapter 12, she rejects
or criticizes the experience or encounter.
Symbols
Symbols are objects, characters, figures, or colors used to represent abstract ideas or concepts.
The Garden
Nearly every object in Alices Adventures in Wonderland functions as a symbol, but nothing clearly
represents one particular thing. The symbolic resonances of Wonderland objects are generally
contained to the individual episode in which they appear. Often the symbols work together to convey
a particular meaning. The garden may symbolize the Garden of Eden, an idyllic space of beauty and
innocence that Alice is not permitted to access. On a more abstract level, the garden may simply
represent the experience of desire, in that Alice focuses her energy and emotion on trying to attain it.
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Summary
Alice sits drowsily by a riverbank, bored by the book her older sister reads to her. Out of nowhere, a
White Rabbit runs past her, fretting that he will be late. The Rabbit pulls a watch out of his waistcoat
pocket and runs across the field and down a hole. Alice impulsively follows the Rabbit and tumbles
down the deep hole that resembles a well, falling slowly for a long time. As she floats down, she
notices that the sides of the well are covered with cupboards and shelves. She plucks a marmalade
jar from one of the shelves. The jar is empty, so Alice sets it down on another shelf. With nothing
else to do, she speaks aloud to herself, wondering how far she has fallen and if she might fall right
through to the other side of the earth. She continues to speak aloud, daydreaming about her cat
Dinah. In the midst of imagining a conversation the two of them might have, she abruptly lands.
Unhurt, Alice gets up and catches sight of the White Rabbit as he vanishes around a corner.
Alice approaches a long corridor lined by doors. The doors are all locked, so Alice tests them with a
key that she finds on a glass table. After searching around, Alice discovers a small door behind a
curtain. She tests the key again and finds that it opens up to a passage and a garden. Since the
door is much too small for Alice to squeeze through, she ventures back to the table with the hope
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Analysis
Alices Adventures in Wonderland begins with Alice dozing off as her sister reads to her, anticipating
the strange and nonsensical events that occur throughout the book. As her sister reads, Alice nods
off into a dream-like state in which she seems to catch sight of a fully dressed white rabbit capable of
speaking English. Even before she enters Wonderland, she experiences phenomena that depart
from the conventional rules of the real world. The plunge into the rabbit hole represents a plunge into
deep sleep. Her dreams create a fully formed world that constantly shifts and transforms with its own
unique logic. The slow fall imitates the shift from dozing off to deep sleep, beginning with Alices idle
daydreaming and ending with her firmly placed in her dream world. Alice slowly acclimates to the
dream world but does not let go of the established logic of the waking world. She marvels that after
this fall, she would think nothing of falling off of the top of her house, much less down the stairs,
even though the narrator reminds us that both falls would still likely kill her.
Alice runs away from the Victorian world of her sister because she feels unfulfilled, but she quickly
discovers that Wonderland will not fulfill any of her desires. Wonderland thwarts her expectations at
every turn. The Rabbit represents this motif of frustrated desire. His antics inspire Alice to follow him
down the hole and into Wonderland, but he constantly stays one step ahead of her. Led on by
curiosity, Alice follows the elusive rabbit even though she does not know what she will do once she
catches him. She pursues him out of pure curiosity but believes that catching him will give her some
new knowledge or satisfaction. Even when the outcome is unknown, the act of chasing implies that a
desired goal exists.
Alice cannot enter the garden even though she wants to, and her desire to enter the garden
represents the feelings of nostalgia that accompany growing up. Carroll dramatizes the frustrations
that occur with growing older as Alice finds herself either too small or too large to fit through the
passageway into the garden. After drinking the potion, Alice shrinks and cannot reach the key on the
table. The helplessness that comes with her exaggeratedly small size represents the feelings of
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Summary
After finishing the cake that says EAT ME, Alice grows to nine feet tall and finds that she can barely
get an eye down to the doorway. She begins to cry, and her massive tears form a sizable pool at her
feet. The White Rabbit reappears and mutters to himself about keeping a Duchess waiting. Alice
attempts to speak to him, but he scuttles away, leaving behind his gloves and fan. Alice picks up the
fan and begins fanning herself. She muses on the possibility that she may not be Alice but someone
else entirely. To determine if she knows all that Alice is supposed to know, she starts to recite her
lessons. She finds that she gets the recitations wrong and considers the idea that she may not be
Alice, but possibly a girl she knows named Mabel. Since Mabel knows very little, it makes sense to
Alice that her confusion over the lessons must indicate that she has somehow become Mabel. If she
is Mabel, there is no reason for her to find her way out of the well to rejoin society. Even though
shes confused about her identity, she knows that she must find a way out of the well and back to the
world aboveground.
Alice realizes that the fanning motion causes her to shrink, so she fans herself down to a size that
will allow her to fit through the door. Once again, Alice has forgotten the key, but before she can
become upset, she tumbles into a pool of salt water. She thinks she has fallen into the sea, but
quickly realizes that she is swimming in her own giant tears. As she swims, she comes across a
Mouse, whom she asks for help. The Mouse doesnt understand Alice, so she tries to speak French
to him. She recites a line from her French lessons, inquiring after a cat. At the mention of the cat, the
Mouse leaps with fright. Alice apologizes but then absentmindedly chatters about her cat Dinah. The
Mouse becomes offended, so she changes the subject to dogs. The talk of dogs only frightens the
Mouse more, and he begins to swim away. Alice promises to stop talking about cats and dogs if the
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Analysis
Alice becomes confused about her identity as her size changes, mirroring the confusion that occurs
during the transition from childhood to adulthood. The reality that she is too large to fit into the
garden produces confusion over who she is, which Alice responds to with bouts of crying and selfreproach. Unable to accept the changes she is experiencing, she questions her own identity. Since
she cannot remember her own lessons, she believes that she must not be Alice anymore. At first,
Alice assumes that she may in fact be someone she knows. The comparisons she draws between
herself and Mabel show her class-consciousness, as well as her ties to the material trappings of the
Victorian world. Though she tries to use chains of reasoning suited to the aboveground world, the
paradox of Wonderland is that she must accept the logic of nonsense or she will go mad with
contradiction.
Alice tries to deal with her predicament reasonably, but the episode in the pool of tears illustrates
how easily Wonderland distracts her from reason and causes her to react emotionally. The sea of
tears is like a punishment for Alices giving in to her own emotions. Alice vacillates between crying
and scolding herself, going back and forth between emotion and reason. However, as she swims,
she doesnt notice that the landscape has transformed around her. The great hall has become an
ocean, while the floor has become a dry shore. Instead of reacting to her predicament by
rationalizing the problem or starting to cry, she distracts herself by trying to figure out how to address
the Mouse. Alice has started to react with total detachment to the absurd situations in which she
finds herself. As she proceeds throughout her journeys, she will continue to encounter problems that
cause her to react with extremes of emotion or reason. However, in this scene, she has begun to
take the absurdities of Wonderland at face value, allowing herself to become distracted so that she
ignores the real problem at hand.
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Analysis
The Caucus race provides a thinly veiled critique of the absurdity of English politics at the turn of the
century while making a larger comment about the general meaninglessness of life. The animals run
randomly in circles, progress nowhere, and arbitrarily adjourn without any clear conclusion. Carroll
implies that politicians do the same, behaving with a great deal of pomp and circumstance without
actually accomplishing anything. On a broader scale, the caucus race seems to imply that there may
not be a clear purpose and meaning to life itself. Though the race accomplishes the intended
purpose of getting everyone dry, they do not follow a clear path or understand what they are doing
as they do it. This may be a broader commentary on the fact that life takes unexpected and
sometimes arbitrary twists and turns but ultimately ends up in the right place even though there may
not be a clear purpose.
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Summary
The White Rabbit approaches Alice, looking for his gloves and fan. Alice searches dutifully but
cannot find them. The White Rabbit mistakes Alice for his housemaid, Mary Ann, and commands her
to go to his house and fetch his things. Startled by the Rabbits demands, Alice obeys and soon finds
his house. As she walks, she thinks about how strange it is to take orders from animals and
imagines that her cat Dinah might start ordering her around when she gets back home. Inside of the
house, she finds the gloves and fan, as well as a little bottle labeled DRINK ME. Curious to find out
what the contents of the bottle will do, Alice drinks the liquid. Before she can finish, she begins
growing rapidly and can barely fit in the room. Her arm dangles from a window and her foot becomes
wedged in the chimney.
Alice decides that her adventures are like a fairy tale and imagines writing her own stories once she
grows up. Given her new size, she reasons that perhaps she has in fact grown up and will never
age. The White Rabbit interrupts her train of thought by calling for his fan and gloves. He tries to
storm into the house, but Alices giant arm prevents the door from opening. The Rabbit tries to climb
through the window, but Alice bats him away with her giant hand. The Rabbit calls out for his servant,
Pat, and the two begin to plot a way to deal with Alice when she swats them away again. The Rabbit
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Analysis
The White Rabbits status as an authority figure forces Alice to adjust her perception that humans sit
at the top of the animal hierarchy. Alice wonders if her experiences in Wonderland will affect the way
she conducts herself when she gets back home, since she imagines that she will have to start taking
orders from her cat Dinah. Alice accepts the inversion of the natural order with the same faith that
she might accept new information in her normal day-to-day life. Wonderland breaks down Alices
beliefs about her identity and replaces those learned beliefs and understandings of the world with
Wonderlands nonsensical rules. Alice understands this identity displacement in terms of a fairy tale.
She states, When I used to read fairy tales, I fancied that kind of thing never happened, and now
here I am in the middle of one! Fiction has intruded on her own sense of reality, and she finds
herself unable to keep the two separate. Alice is no longer the Alice she knew at home and is not
altogether sure of who she is anymore.
Alice continues to have problems with her size, which exacerbates her confusion over her identity
and once again alludes to the painful transition from childhood to adulthood. In Chapter 1, her
changing size became a source of anxiety for Alice, revealing her desire to remain a child and avoid
the pressures of adulthood. In this chapter, she identifies as a growing girl too large to be shut in by
forces that seek to constrict and repress her. The focus on physical space in Chapter 4 emphasizes
a childs emerging feelings of claustrophobia as he or she grows and changes. The house
represents domestic repression, an idea underscored by the fact that Alice enters it as a servant girl.
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Summary
Alice comes across a Caterpillar that is resting on top of a giant mushroom and smoking a hookah
pipe. The two stare at each other in silence for a while before the Caterpillar asks Alice, Who are
you? Alice has trouble explaining who she is to the antagonistic and contemptuous Caterpillar.
Dejected, she turns to leave, but the Caterpillar calls her back to recite a poem. The Caterpillar duly
notes that she recites the poem incorrectly and goes on to ask what size she would like to be. Alice
states that being three inches tall is a wretched height, which insults the three-inch-tall Caterpillar.
The Caterpillar crawls away in a huff, but not before telling Alice that eating one side of the
mushroom will make her grow larger and eating the other side will make her grow smaller.
Alice tastes the right-hand portion of the mushroom and shrinks. She next tries part of the left-hand
portion of the mushroom, and her neck grows so long that her head is above the treetops. Realizing
she cannot get the other part of mushroom to her mouth, she attempts to reorient herself when a
Pigeon attacks her. The Pigeon has mistaken Alice for a serpent who wants to eat its eggs. Alice
assures the Pigeon that she is not a serpent, and the Pigeon skulks back to its nest, leaving Alice to
nibble at the two pieces of the mushroom until she returns to her original height. Back at her proper
size, Alice wanders around the forest looking for the garden when she encounters a four-foot-tall
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Analysis
When the Caterpillar asks Alice Who are you, she finds that she doesnt know who she is anymore.
The Caterpillar aggravates Alices uncertainty about her constantly changing size. The Caterpillar
also may represent the threat of sexuality, as suggested by its phallic shape. Alice recognizes this
threat when she calls attention to the Caterpillars impending bodily transformation, since caterpillars
reach sexual maturity in butterfly form. Though she seeks guidance and compassion from the
Caterpillar, she finds only further self doubt under its brusque scrutiny. Regardless, she defers to the
Caterpillars authority, just as she did with the White Rabbit in the previous chapter. Alices confusion
peaks when the Caterpillar seems to be able to read her thoughts, answering her unspoken question
just as if she had asked it aloud. Her identity is so confused now that her thoughts no longer seem
to be her own.
Alice has trouble reciting the poem Father William and finds that her inability to remember things
she knows well shows the effects of Wonderland on her brain. Though the Caterpillar is a denizen of
Wonderland, he has some familiarity with the poem that Alice recites, and he demonstrates his
knowledge by pointing out that she has it wrong from beginning to end. The poem Father William
(also known as The Old Mans Comforts), by Robert Southey, is a didactic poem about the
importance of living in moderation, and many Victorian children were required to memorize it. The
Caterpillar proposes that Alice recite the poem to gauge how much she has changed. Alices
mutilation of the poem occurs as a result of Wonderlands effect on her brain. The Caterpillars
contemptuous authoritarian presence compounds her flustered state.
The Pigeon accuses Alice of being a serpent, which causes her to doubt not only who she is but also
what she is. Estranged from her old self, Alice has trouble defending herself to the Pigeon. The
Pigeon reasons that since Alice exhibits key traits of a serpent, having a long neck and eating eggs,
she must in fact be a serpent. Alice becomes trapped in this logic so that she becomes identified by
a single action and feature. The Pigeon threatens Alices already shaken assumption of a stable
identity.
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Summary
From the wood, Alice sees a fish in footmans livery approach the house and knock on the door. A
similarly dressed frog answers the door and receives a letter inviting the Duchess to play croquet
with the Queen. After the Fish Footman leaves, Alice approaches the Frog Footman, who sits on the
ground staring stupidly up at the sky. Alice knocks at the door, but the Frog Footman explains that
now that she is outside, no one will answer her knock since the people inside are making too much
noise to hear her. He tells her he plans to sit there for days and seems unsurprised when the door
opens a crack and a plate flies out and grazes his nose. Annoyed with his idiotic manner, Alice
opens the door and finds herself in a kitchen. A Duchess nurses a baby, a grinning cat sits on the
hearth, and a Cook stands at the stove, dumping pepper into a cauldron of soup. The pepper causes
the Duchess and the baby to sneeze incessantly.
Alice inquires why the cat grins and learns from the Duchess that it is a Cheshire Cat. Wondering
aloud why a cat would grin at all, the Duchess insults Alice, telling her that she must not know very
much. Meanwhile, the Cook hurls objects randomly at the Duchess and the baby, including fire-irons,
saucepans, and plates. Alice tells the Cook to mind herself, and attempts to change the subject of
conversation by bringing up the earths axis. The Duchess mishears Alice, and thinking she is talking
about axes, spontaneously shouts, Chop off her head! The Duchess starts to sing a nasty lullaby to
the baby, roughly tussling it as she sings. Upon finishing, she flings the baby at Alice and hurries out
of the room to prepare for croquet with the Queen.
Alice takes the baby outside, only to discover that it is a pig. After she lets the pig toddle off, she
encounters the Cheshire Cat again, grinning broadly as it rests on the bough of a tree. After inquiring
of the Cheshire Cat where she might go next, he tells her that no matter where she goes she will end
up somewhere. The Cheshire Cat arbitrarily suggests she visit the Mad Hatter and the March Hare,
but warns her that they are both mad. When Alice responds that she does not want to be among
mad people, he tells her that all people are mad, and if she is in Wonderland, she must be mad too.
Alice attempts to press the point, but the Cheshire Cat changes the subject, telling Alice that it will
see her at the Queens croquet match later. The Cheshire Cat vanishes and reappears before fading
to nothing but a disembodied grin, leaving Alice to travel onward to the March Hares house. Upon
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Analysis
Chapter 6 derives humor from the fact that the inhabitants of Wonderland consider their environment
and actions to be completely normal. The Frog Footman reacts to the near miss of the flying plate
with complete nonchalance, talking on as if nothing had happened. The Frog Footman seems to
expect nothing less than total chaos. Alice attempts to fit the Frog Footmans behavior into a logical
structure, failing to understand that Wonderlands order is defined by chaos. She does not realize
how close she comes to the truth with the exclamation that the Frog Footmans belligerence is
enough to drive one crazy! As the Cheshire Cat later explains, Alice must be mad herself in order
to understand the nature of things in Wonderland.
Even though there seems to be a rigid social structure in Wonderland, the Frog Footman and the
Duchess reject normal social conventions and behave arbitrarily. The presence of a Duchess with a
Footman suggests a rigid social order, complete with codes of conduct. This hierarchy reminds Alice
of her own society, but their behavior destroys any traditional notion of social convention. The Frog
Footman is idiotic and argumentative, and the Duchess exhibits vile and violent behavior. Traditional
social codes are ignored, as the Frog Footman has no comprehension of time and thinks nothing of
plates flying at his face. The Duchess treats her baby rudely and aggressively, and would likely scoff
at the ways that Victorian women care for their babies. The Duchesss rhyme emphasizes the
rejection of social convention, drawing upon a Victorian poem by David Bates that recommends
gentle treatment of babies, a message that the Duchess completely ignores. Alice begins to accept
the rejection of tradition and social order when she discovers that the baby is in fact a pig,
considering that other children she knows from home might also do very well as pigs . . . if only one
knew the right way to change them. Despite the pun on change (to change a babys diaper, to
literally change a baby into a pig), Alice begins to accept the bizarre social behaviors of Wonderland.
The Cheshire Cat explains to Alice that madness is the chief characteristic of the residents of
Wonderland, and that to be in Wonderland is to be mad. In order to exist at all in Wonderland, one
must accept its inherent irrationality. The Cheshire Cat reasons that in order to accept this
irrationality at all, one must be mad. Alices unflagging curiosity makes her mad in the Cheshire Cats
eyes, since it characterizes her unique and illogical approach to Wonderlands natives. The Cheshire
Cats use of the word mad puns on the word made, since everything in Wonderland is fabricated.
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Summary
Alice approaches a large table set under the tree outside the March Hares house and comes across
the Mad Hatter and the March Hare taking tea. They rest their elbows on a sleeping Dormouse who
sits between them. They tell Alice that there is no room for her at the table, but Alice sits anyway.
The March Hare offers Alice wine, but there is none. Alice tells the March Hare that his conduct is
uncivil, to which he rejoins that it was uncivil of her to sit down without being invited. The Mad Hatter
enters the conversation, opining that Alices hair wants cutting. Alice admonishes his rudeness, but
he ignores her scolding and responds with a riddle: Why is a raven like a writing desk? Alice
attempts to answer the riddle, which begins a big argument about semantics. After their argument,
the tea party sits in silence until the Mad Hatter asks the March Hare the time. When he discovers
that the March Hares watch, which measures the day of the month, is broken, the Mad Hatter
becomes angry. He blames the March Hare for getting crumbs on the watch when the March Hare
was spreading butter on it. The March Hare sullenly dips the watch in his tea, dejectedly remarking
that It was the best butter.
Alice gives up on the riddle and becomes angry with the Mad Hatter when she discovers that he
doesnt know the answer either. She tells him he should not waste time asking riddles that have no
answers. The Mad Hatter calmly explains that Time is a him, not an it. He goes on to recount how
Time has been upset ever since the Queen of Hearts said the Mad Hatter was murdering time
while he performed a song badly. Since then, Time has stayed fixed at six oclock, which means that
they exist in perpetual tea-time. Bored with this line of conversation, the March Hare states that he
would like to hear a story, so they wake up the Dormouse. The Dormouse tells a story about three
sisters who live in a treacle-well, eating and drawing treacle. Confused by the story, Alice interjects
with so many questions that the Dormouse becomes insulted. Alice continues to ask questions until
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Analysis
When Alice discovers that Time is a person and not merely an abstract concept, she realizes that not
only are social conventions inverted, but the very ordering principles of the universe are turned
upside down. Not even time is reliable, as Alice learns that Time is not an abstract it but a specific
him. An unruly, subjective personality replaces the indifferent mechanical precision associated with
the concept of time. Time can punish those who have offended it, and Time has in fact punished the
Mad Hatter by stopping still at six oclock, trapping the Mad Hatter and March Hare in a perpetual
teatime. The Mad Hatter, the March Hare, and the Dormouse must carry out an endless string of
pointless conversations, which may reflect a childs perception of what an actual English teatime was
really like. Alice must adjust her own perceptions of time, since the Mad Hatters watch indicates that
days are rushing by. However, the party has not moved past the month of March, the month during
which the March Hare goes mad.
Though the tea party challenges Alices understanding of the fundamental concept of time, the Mad
Hatters answerless riddle reaffirms Wonderlands unusual sense of order. The riddle seems to have
no answer and exists solely to perpetuate confusion and disorder. Some readers have suggested
that the riddle does in fact have an answer: Edgar Allen Poe wrote on both the subject of a Raven
and wrote on a physical writing desk. In Wonderland, chaos is the ruling principle, but a strange
sense of order still exists. Though riddles need not have answers, language must retain some kind
of logic. The Mad Hatter, the March Hare, and the Dormouse point out to Alice that saying what she
means and meaning what she says are not the same thing. Alice has said that she cannot take
more tea because she has not had any yet. However, as the Mad Hatter points out, Alice can
indeed take more tea even though she has not had any, since its very easy to take more than
nothing. The language games at the tea party underscore the inconsistency of Wonderland, but also
imply that the ordering principles that govern Alices world are just as arbitrary.
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Summary
Alice enters the garden and meets three gardeners in the shape of playing cards. The gardeners
Two, Five, and Seven bicker with each other as they paint the white roses on the rose trees red.
Upon noticing Alice, the gardeners explain that they have planted white rose trees by mistake and
must paint them red before the Queen of Hearts finds out. Just then, the Queen arrives, surrounded
by a great entourage of living playing cards. The gardeners scramble to their bellies to bow before
the Queen, who asks for Alices name with great severity. Alice answers the Queen graciously and
realizes she should not be afraid, as they are simply a pack of cards. The Queen asks Alice about
the trembling gardeners. Alice responds flippantly, prompting the Queen to call for Alices beheading
until the King calms her down. Upon discovering what the gardeners were doing, she orders their
decapitation and moves on. Alice saves the gardeners by hiding them in a flower pot and going off
with the Queen to play croquet. When she arrives at the croquet match, Alice finds out from the
White Rabbit that the Duchess is under sentence of execution for boxing the Queens ears.
Alice has a difficult time adjusting to the curious version of croquet played by the Queen. The
croquet ground is ridged, the croquet balls are live hedgehogs, and the mallets are live flamingos.
The various playing cards stand on all fours to form the arches that the balls are hit through. As she
plays, the Queen apoplectically shouts for everyones decapitation. Alice attempts to slip away from
the croquet match, but catches sight of the Cheshire Cats grin. The Cheshire Cat asks her how she
is getting on, and Alice begins to complain about the Queens unusual behavior. The King notices the
conversation and attempts to bully the Cheshire Cat, but it refuses to give in to the Kings taunts. The
King becomes aggravated and calls for the Queen to remove the Cheshire Cat. The Queen
carelessly orders its decapitation, but the executioner and the King cannot agree on how to execute
the Cheshire Cat, who at this point is only a head floating in midair. They appeal to Alice, who
suggests that they get the advice of the Duchess, who owns the Cheshire Cat. By the time the
Duchess arrives, the Cheshire Cat has completely vanished.
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Summary
After the disappearance of the Cheshire Cat, the croquet game starts up again and the Duchess
takes Alices arm. The two start to walk, and Alice becomes uncomfortable that the Duchess holds
her so close. Alice thinks that the Duchess is behaving pleasantly because there isnt any pepper
present. The two walk and talk, and the Duchess takes every opportunity to explain various moral
lessons to Alice. The Duchess attempts to put her hand around Alices waist, but Alice convinces her
not to, telling her that the flamingo croquet mallet might bite. They run into the Queen, who sternly
orders the Duchess off and asks Alice to resume the croquet game.
In little time, the Queen narrows the croquet game down to Alice, the King, and herself. All of the
other players have been sent off for beheadings. With no soldiers remaining to act as arches, the
Queen concludes the game and decides that Alice should visit the Mock Turtle. While the King
pardons the condemned croquet players, the Queen brings Alice to the Gryphon, who leads her to
the Mock Turtle. En route, the Gryphon explains to Alice that the Queen never actually executes
anyone. Alice meets the Mock Turtle and immediately becomes concerned since he looks so sad.
The Gryphon shows no sympathy for the Mock Turtle, explaining to Alice that he only fancies himself
as being sad.
Amid constant sobbing, the Mock Turtle begins his tale by explaining that he used to be a real turtle.
He went to sea school every day, and his master was an old turtle named Tortoise. Alice interrupts,
asking why the teacher would go by the name of Tortoise if he wasnt a tortoise. The Mock Turtle
chastises her, explaining that he was so named because he taught us. He goes on to talk about his
education, which he considers to be the finest available. He studied a variety of unusual subjects,
including Reeling and Writing, as well as Ambition, Distraction, Uglification, and Derision. Alice
inquires about the length of the lessons, and the Mock Turtle says that they became shorter with
each passing day. Alice finds this puzzling, but the Mock Turtle explains that they were called
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Analysis
The Duchess tries to find a moral in everything in much the same way that Alice tries to understand
her environment in terms of cause and effect. The Duchess remarks that everythings got a moral, if
only you can find it. Her statement resonates with Alices understanding that everything she
encounters should result in a lesson of some kind. Alice fails to recognize that her preoccupation
with rules resembles the Duchesss preoccupation with morals. Her inability to see this parallel
shows that she has not reached a level of self-awareness that will allow her to understand the power
that she is capable of wielding over Wonderland.
Carroll uses the character of the Duchess to condemn the self-righteous moralizing of Victorian
England. The Duchesss relentless discussion of morals prevents Alice from having private space for
her own thoughts. The Duchess seems to be corrupting Alice, and her physical advances have
sexual overtones. The romantic overtures are subtle at first, but the proposal of an experiment to
wrap her arm around Alices waist seems ominous and threatening, especially given the Duchesss
morals about love. The Duchess comes across as a sexual predator who makes Alice feel both
uncomfortable and worried. Although one critic writes that this scene suggests Carrolls own fear
of being seduced by a middle-aged woman, it is more likely that Carroll meant to denounce adult
didacticism and the feelings of intrusion and threat it inspires in children.
The Gryphon and the Mock Turtle are the first inhabitants of Wonderland that Alice can comfortably
relate to, but she finds she cannot escape the nonsense logic that dominates their behavior. The
Gryphon and Mock Turtle speak directly and have peaceable manners. They become the closest
thing to friends that Alice has encountered thus far on her travels. The Gryphon chuckles at the
Queen and deflates her authority by explaining that she never actually goes through with the
executions she orders. Alice finds comfort in the fact that her two new companions are able to step
back and critically observe the unusual aspects of Wonderland. Additionally, the Gryphon and Mock
Turtle have had lives that at least bear some resemblance to Alices. The description of sea school
reminds Alice of her own education, even though the subjects studied there are puns on the type of
studies Alice might have pursued in school. However, the Gryphon and Mock Turtle inevitably begin
speaking nonsense. Alice finds herself at an impasse when they fail to address the question about
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Summary
The Mock Turtle continues to sigh and sob and finally asks Alice if she has ever been introduced to a
lobster. Alice almost volunteers that she once tasted one, but checks herself and simply says no.
The Mock Turtle and the Gryphon describe the Lobster-Quadrille, a dance where all of the sea
animals (except the jellyfish) partner up with the lobsters, advance from the seashore and throw the
lobsters out to sea. The Mock Turtle and Gryphon decide to demonstrate the first figure of the
Lobster-Quadrille for Alice, even though they dont have any lobsters. As they dance, the Mock Turtle
sings a tune about a whiting and a snail. After they finish the dance, Alice asks about the whiting,
holding back her impulse to mention that she has also tasted whiting. The Gryphon explains to Alice
that despite her misconception, whiting does not have crumbs and is named a whiting because it
shines the sea animals shoes. Noting that in the song, the porpoise steps on the whitings tail, Alice
says that had she been in the whitings place she would have left the porpoise out of the dance. The
Mock Turtle explains to Alice that it is unwise for a fish to go anywhere without a porpoise (punning
on purpose).
The Gryphon and the Mock Turtle ask Alice to recount her adventures, and Alice relates her travels
in Wonderland, getting as far as her encounter with the Caterpillar before they interrupt her. They
find it curious that Alice botched the words to Father William, and they order her to recite the
poem Tis the voice of the sluggard. Alice messes up the words of this poem, too, which greatly
befuddles the Mock Turtle, who wants explanations of the nonsensical verse that results. The
Gryphon recommends that she stop reciting. He offers to show her the Lobster-Quadrille again or
hear a song by the Mock Turtle. Alice requests the song and the Mock Turtle sings Turtle Soup. As
the Mock Turtle finishes the song, the Gryphon hears the cry The trials beginning! and whisks Alice
away.
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Summary
Alice arrives in the courtroom and finds the King and Queen of Hearts on their thrones, surrounded
by a large crowd of animals and the whole deck of cards. The Knave lies chained before them. Alice
surveys the room and takes great pleasure in identifying the various features of a court of law that
she has read about. Alice notices that all of the jurors are writing down their own names, which the
Gryphon explains that they all must do lest they forget their names before the trials end. Alice calls
the jurors stupid things, and the jurors immediately write this down. She snatches a squeaking
pencil out of the hand of the juror Bill, last seen as the servant of the White Rabbit, and he promptly
begins writing with his finger.
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Analysis
Alice has failed to find meaning in Wonderland but hopes that she will find logic and order in the trial.
She sees the Wonderland court as a true court of justice, viewing the institution of law as a refuge of
sanity in which an objective and undeniable truth will prevail. She excitedly identifies the various
components of a court of law, such as the jury box and the jurors. The similarities of the Wonderland
court to an aboveground court reinforce Alices faith in the sanctity of law. Alice takes great pleasure
in recognizing the elements of a courtroom given the degree to which her expectations and
perceptions have been confounded throughout her travels. Alice desires meaning and order and the
trial becomes to the last opportunity to realize her need for coherence and sanity.
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Summary
Alice jumps to the White Rabbits call to the stand. She forgets that she has grown larger and knocks
over the jury stand, then scrambles to put all of the jurors back. Alice claims to know nothing
whatever about the tarts, which the King deems very important. The White Rabbit corrects the
King, suggesting that he in fact means unimportant. The King agrees, muttering the words
important and unimportant to himself.
The King interjects with Rule 42, which states, All persons more than a mile high to leave the court.
Everyone turns to Alice, who denies she is a mile high and accuses the King of fabricating the rule.
The King replies that Rule 42 is the oldest rule in the book, but Alice retorts that if it is the oldest rule
in the book, it ought to be the first rule. The King becomes quiet for a moment before calling for a
verdict. The White Rabbit interrupts and declares that more evidence must be presented first. He
presents a paper supposedly written by the Knave, though it is not written in the Knaves
handwriting. The Knave refutes the charge, explaining that there is no signature on the document.
The King reasons that the Knave must have meant mischief because he did not sign the note like an
honest man would. The court seems pleased by this reasoning, and the Queen concludes that the
paper proves the Knaves guilt. Alice demands to read the poem on the paper. While the poem
appears to have no meaning, the King provides an explanation and calls for a verdict. The Queen
demands that the sentence come before the verdict. Alice chaffs at this proposal and criticizes the
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Analysis
The chapter title Alices Evidence refers both to the evidence that Alice gives during the trial, and
also the evidence that she discovers that Wonderland is a dream that she can control by waking up.
Alice realizes during the trial that it all doesnt matter a bit what the jury records or whether the jury
is upside down or right side up. None of the details or orientations in Wonderland have any bearing
on a coherent or meaningful outcome. Alices growth during the trial mirrors her growing awareness
of the fact that Wonderland is an illusion. She starts to grow when the Mad Hatter bites into his
teacup, and she reaches full height during the heated exchange with the Queen when she points out
that her antagonists are nothing but a pack of cards! Alice exposes Wonderland as an illusion and
her growth to full size comes with her realization that she has a measure of control over the illusion.
Once she understands that Wonderland is a dream, she wakes up and shatters the illusion.
Alice fully grasps the nonsensical nature of Wonderland when the King interprets the Knaves poem.
Alice disputes the Kings attempts to attach meaning to the nonsense words of the poem. Her
criticisms are ironic, since throughout her travels she has continually attempted to make sense of the
various situations and stories she has encountered. Alice finally understands the futility of trying to
make meaning out of her adventures of Wonderland since every part of it is completely
incomprehensible. This message is meant not only for Alice but for the readers ofAlices Adventures
in Wonderland as well. Just as the court complies with the Kings harebrained readings of the poem,
Carroll sends a message to those who would attempt to assign specific meanings to the
events. Alices Adventures in Wonderland actively resists definitive interpretation, which accounts for
the diversity of the criticism written about the novella.
The final scene with Alices sister establishes narrative symmetry and changes the tone of Alices
journey from harrowing quest to childhood fantasy. The reintroduction of the calm scene at the
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Key Facts
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story.
P O I N T O F V I E W The narrator speaks in third person, though occasionally in first and second
person. The narrative follows Alice around on her travels, voicing her thoughts and feelings.
T O N E Straightforward; avuncular
T E N S E Past
S E T T I N G ( T I M E ) Victorian era, circa publication date
S E T T I N G ( P L A C E ) England, Wonderland
P R O T AG O N I S T Alice
M A J O R C O N F L I C T Alice attempts to come to terms with the puzzle of Wonderland as she
Wonderland.
C L I M A X Alice gains control over her size and enters the garden, where she participates in the trial
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Study Questions
1. Discuss the significance of the Queen of Hearts in Alices Adventures in Wonderland.
As the ruler of Wonderland, the Queen of Hearts functions as Alices primary antagonist, controlling
the realm that thwarts Alice at every turn. As the suit of hearts suggests, she is the heart of Alices
conflict with Wonderland. When Alice exposes the Queen as a fraud who is nothing more than a
playing card, the dream of Wonderland ends abruptly and Alice regains the world of sense and order
she has known since birth. Though Alice guesses the Queen of Hearts secret midway through the
book, she hesitates to call her out, demonstrating the power that the Queen of Heats has over the
characters in Wonderland. Though the Queens threats are, like Wonderland itself, devoid of
substance, she still instills fear in her subjects and Alice alike.
The Queen of Hearts poses an additional threat to Alice in her journey toward womanhood. Alices
Adventures in Wonderland recounts Alices metaphorical journey to adulthood. Over the course of
her adventures, she faces several threatening situations with sexual overtones, but the Queen of
Heartss threat is both the most direct and the most subtle. In screaming Off with her head! to Alice,
the Queen of Hearts threatens her life but also her sexuality, since the word refers both to Alices
literal head and her maidenhead, or maidenhood (virginity). The Queen of Hearts violently attempts
to force Alices sexual awakening against her will, and only with Alices growing power and sense of
self can she stand up to the Queen and call her hand by revealing her to be a mere playing card.
2. What role does the garden play in Alices Adventures in Wonderland?
The garden in Alices Adventures in Wonderland exists as an Edenic object of desire for Alice. The
sight of the garden draws Alice in with its beds of bright flowers and cool fountains, and her
inability to enter sets the tone for the exasperating detours that follow one after the other. When
viewed in terms of the metaphorical onset of Alices puberty, the garden initially symbolizes the
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Quiz
38
2. Which character does Alice scare away with talk of her cat Dinah?
(A) The Mock Turtle
(B) The March Hare
(C) The Mouse
(D) The Knave of Hearts
3. In Alices Adventures in Wonderland, which character serves as herald to the King and Queen of
Hearts?
(A) The Gryphon
(B) The White Rabbit
(C) The Knave of Hearts
(D) The Dormouse
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6. How does Alice get to the great hallway lined with doors a second time?
(A) She walks through a door in a tree
(B) She crawls into a hole under the Mad Hatters table
(C) The Cheshire-Cat gives her directions
(D) She walks backward
9. In what capacity does Alice enter the chess game in Through the Looking-Glass?
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11. What is the last thing that Alice sees the Mad Hatter and March Hare doing?
(A) Eating their plates
(B) Stuffing the Dormouse into the teapot
(C) Spreading butter on the Mad Hatters timepiece
(D) Drinking tea and singing
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14. According to Alice, what is a common feature in the poetry in Through the Looking-Glass?
(A) Fish
(B) Hair
(C) Monsters
(D) Catnip
16. What is the last thing we see before the Cheshire Cat fades the first time?
(A) Its eyes
(B) Its tail
(C) Its grin
(D) It disappears entirely
17. What secret does the Gryphon reveal about the Queen of Hearts?
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18. What piece of clothing does Alice fasten for the White Queen?
(A) Her cape
(B) Her crown
(C) Her shawl
(D) Her buckles
19. Which two characters from Alices Adventures in Wonderland reappear with different names
in Through the Looking-Glass?
(A) The Mock Turtle and the Gryphon
(B) The Dodo and the Lory
(C) The Mad Hatter and the March Hare
(D) The Queen and King of Hearts
20. Which character takes Alice through the forest in Through the Looking-Glass?
(A) The Fawn
(B) The Gnat
(C) The White Queen
(D) The Unicorn
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24. What does the White Knight consider (to be) his most clever invention? (this question is not
discussed in detail in the summary)
(A) A new kind of helmet
(B) Dominos Twisty Bread
(C) A new pudding during the meat-course
(D) A way to prevent balding
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2001.
C A R R O L L , L E W I S . The Annotated Alice: The Definitive Edition. Edited by Martin Gardner. New
Godine, 2000.
P H I L L I P S , R O B E R T , ed. Aspects of Alice. New York: Vanguard Press, 1971
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APA
SparkNotes Editors. (2005). SparkNote on Alices Adventures in Wonderland. Retrieved May 11,
2015, from http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/alice/
IN TEXT CITATION
MLA
Their conversation is awkward, especially when she mentions Wickham, a subject Darcy clearly
wishes to avoid (SparkNotes Editors).
APA
Their conversation is awkward, especially when she mentions Wickham, a subject Darcy clearly
wishes to avoid (SparkNotes Editors, 2005).
FOOTNOTE
The Chicago Manual of Style
Chicago requires the use of footnotes, rather than parenthetical citations, in conjunction with a list of
works cited when dealing with literature.
1 SparkNotes Editors. SparkNote on Alices Adventures in Wonderland. SparkNotes LLC. 2005.
http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/alice/ (accessed May 11, 2015).
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