Characters
Themes
Symbols
Who said this?
A pool of tears?
100

The name of Alice's cat

Dinah

100

Mention 3 themes that the story contains

Growing up, Communication breakdown, Good behaviour, Learning the rules, Identity, Death, Madness, Logic/Illogic

100

Mention 3 symbols from the story

Growing and shrinking, The garden, the journey, following orders

100

"You're nothing but a pack of cards!"

Alice

100

Mention 3 facts about the book/story

It was published in 1865

It contains 12 chapters

John Tenniel draw tha book's illustartions

The story was inventend on a boat trip for the Liddell sisters

The aim of the story is to entertain

The story is written in the 3rd person narrator

200

The first creature form Wonderland that Alice encounters

The White Rabbit

200

Explain how the theme "growth2 is developed in the story

Alice's adventures parallel the journey from shildhood into adulthood...

200

What does Wonderland represent?

an illogical, nonsensical place where nothing is as expected.

200

"Mine is a sad and long tale"

The Mouse

200

Why is the story told as a dream?

It is told as a dream to make its criticism acceptable

300

The character who teaches Alice how to control her physical size.


The Caterpillar

300

Explain how the theme "Communication" is shown in the story

Logical communication is interrupted and language can be a source of confusion

300

Explain the symbols "Growing and shrinking"

The growing and shrinking in the book are clearly signs for growing up—for reaching maturity. As Carroll depicts it, growing up is a painful and confusing process, and it doesn't necessarily have positive results.

300

"Why Mary Ann, what are you doing out here? Run home this moment and fetch me a pair of gloves and a fan!"

The White Rabbit

300

What does the Hatter's madness make allusion to?

His madness makes allusion to the real-life tendency of hatters to go mad because of the poisonous mercury theu used to cure felt.

400

Alice's Nemesis in Wonderland

The Queen of Hearts

400

Victorian society is criticized in the story. Identify 2 examples of this from the story

How children are raised and disciplined (the Duchess and her varied reactions to her baby), the middle-class obsession with time and punctuality (the White Rabbit frantically checking his watch), and 19th-century views on mental illness (the Cheshire Cat's comments about everyone in Wonderland being "mad").


400

What does the hidden garden represent?

In Alice in Wonderland, the garden's symbolism is fluid. Obviously it shares imagery with the Garden of Eden—a lost paradise. It can also be seen to represent unattainable beauty. It looks beautiful when Alice sees it from afar, but the loveliness vanishes as soon as she's actually inside the garden

400

"You are looking for eggs, I know that well enough and what does it matter to me whether you're a little girl or a serpent?" 

The Pigeon

400

Games & Logic play a major role in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Two games played in the story are:

the Caucus Race & Croquet

500

"It had very long claws and a great many teeth, so she felt that it ought to be treated with respect." (Carroll 80).

The Cheshire Cat

500

Death and mortality are underlying themes of the story. Identify 2 examples of this from the story

Shrinking down to nothing, drowning in a pool of tears, fear of the Cheshire Cat, The Cook/Duchess, The Queen

500

What does the baby that turns into a pig symbolise?

That children can grow into disagreeable adults.

500

"Never imagine yourself not to be otherwise than what it might appear to others that you were or might have been was not otherwise that what you had been would have appeared to them to be otherwise."

The Duchess

500

Two reasons poetry is used in Alice's adventures

Satire,Parody, and/or Humor

M
e
n
u