Which physical change most directly symbolizes Alice’s unstable self-perception?
Her changing size (growing/shrinking)
Why does language frequently fail in Wonderland conversations? Choose the answer that identifies the textual device used.
Because words have unstable or shifting meanings in Wonderland.
The Queen of Hearts’ repeated command “Off with their heads!” primarily represents what trait of authority?
Emotional instability and arbitrary abuse of power
Which interpretation best explains Wonderland as a dream: what does it reflect about Alice’s inner life?
It reflects subconscious fears and critiques of the adult world—dream as mirror of inner anxieties.
What does the garden Alice tries to enter throughout the story most likely represent?
Childhood innocence or unattainable desire
The Caterpillar’s repeated question “Who are you?” functions primarily as a challenge to what?
The stability of identity / a challenge to selfhood
Alice’s frequent recitation of incorrect or altered poems demonstrates what literary technique and social critique?
Parody of moral and educational texts
Wonderland’s trial (the court) functions as a satire of what real-world institution or practice?
Victorian justice and arbitrary authority / parody of legal procedure
What is the plot twist at the end of the book, and how does it reframe the preceding events?
Alice wakes up; the dream frame recontextualizes Wonderland as a mental, not literal, realm
The Cheshire Cat’s ability to disappear while leaving only its grin contributes to which thematic idea about identity and perception?
Separation between appearance and reality; identity can persist independently of physical form.
In the lines “Who in the world am I? Ah, that’s the great puzzle,” which interpretation is supported about Alice’s view of self-understanding?
Alice treats self-understanding as an important, unresolved philosophical puzzle.
The Mad Tea Party’s treatment of time (e.g., “Time is a person”) primarily suggests what about language and reality?
That language shapes reality in unstable ways; anthropomorphizing time exposes semantic play
The Duchess’s insistence that everything has a “moral” is best read as a critique of what literary or cultural tendency?
A critique of forced moral lessons in children’s literature and moralizing didacticism
The Cheshire Cat’s statement “we’re all mad here” primarily suggests which idea about madness and cultural norms? Provide the most nuanced reading.
“Madness” depends on cultural norms and perspective; what seems mad in one context may be rational in another.
The White Rabbit’s obsession with time best symbolizes what social condition or emotion?
Anxiety tied to social expectations and clock-driven obligations
Why is Alice unable to clearly define who she is when questioned? Provide the answer that ties textual events to psychological effect.
Her strange experiences destabilize her sense of self; physical and social changes undermine fixed identity
How does the Cheshire Cat’s disappearing grin illustrate instability in linguistic or representational meaning? Connect to two textual implications.
It separates appearance from reality: meaning (the grin) can persist when the body (cat) vanishes, suggesting identity’s independence from physical form and unreliable perception.
Explain how Alice calling the court “a pack of cards” functions as a rhetorical move against arbitrary authority, including one way the text stages this critique
Calling it “a pack of cards” exposes its fragility and arbitrariness; visually and verbally reduces institutions to game pieces.
How does the White Rabbit’s obsession with time function symbolically to relate dream logic to social anxiety? Give a concise explanation.
It symbolizes anxiety tied to social expectations and the pressure to conform to schedules and duties.
Identify the recurring motif word Alice keeps saying (hint: motif from the exam) and explain its significance in two sentences
“Curious” or the motif phrase “How odd” (exam hint — likely “How odd”); it highlights Alice’s continuous questioning and critical perspective.
Explain how Alice’s increasing challenge to Wonderland’s rules near the end reflects a developmental theme about adolescence or maturity.
She gains confidence and rejects illogical authority, reflecting maturation and critical reasoning
Analyze how Carroll uses puns, literalism, and category errors in Wonderland to question the reliability of language. Provide two examples from chapters 10–12.
Carroll uses puns and literal misunderstandings
Discuss how multiple Wonderland figures (Queen, King, Duchess, White Rabbit) together create a commentary on Victorian social order. Support with two textual features.
They exaggerate ritual, arbitrary rule, and performative justice (trial’s nonsense evidence, capricious punishments), satirizing Victorian social rituals and hierarchical enforcement.
Evaluate the claim that Wonderland’s resistance to a clear moral reflects narrative technique rather than authorial indecision. Provide two textual reasons.
The narrative’s episodic, ambiguous structure, and frequent self-reflexive moments (poems, nonsensical trials) foreground thematic ambiguity; Carroll uses satire and parody rather than moralizing closure.
Choose two symbols from chapters 10–12 (e.g., the garden, the trial, size changes, the Cheshire Cat) and analyze how each contributes to a central theme of the novel. Provide one sentence per symbol.
Example: Garden — represents attainable yet elusive maturity/innocence; Trial — symbolizes the failure of rational institutions to deliver justice, reinforcing the novel’s satire.