Submitted by -greek_user_06- t3_zzuspm in books
The other day I finished reading Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and it's safe to say that it has become one of my most favourite books. I really enjoyed the nonsensical nature of the book and I had so much fun while I was reading it. Not to mention that Lewis Carroll's writing was very clever! I can't write a full review about the book now, but I simply loved it.
While I was reading about Alice's adventures, for some reason, I didn't attempt to find a deeper meaning behind them. Sure, I understood that the book explored some themes like growing up, but other than that, I didn't worry myself about the hidden symbolisms. Does that make me dumb?
I enjoyed the book as it was: a bizarre, intriguing read, without an actual plot. I am sure that many readers interpreted the story differently. But I didn't try to analyze every situation and character and I just enjoyed the absurd nature of the novel.
I'd like to see your opinion about this matter and in case you approached the story differently, feel free to share your opinion about it.
Gemmabeta t1_j2drtpz wrote
There is a term for this:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literary_nonsense
Alice as much as there is supposed to be a "point" to the books, the main one seems to be riffing of the endless number of po-faced didactic moralistic poetry that Victorian children were force-fed as part of their education.
All of the poetry in the two books are nonsense parodies of those poems.