Current location - Health Preservation Learning Network - Healthy weight loss - What is the main content of Alice in Wonderland?
What is the main content of Alice in Wonderland?
The main content of Alice in Wonderland is that the lovely English girl Alice found a talking white rabbit with a pocket watch when she was bored. She chased it and accidentally fell into a rabbit hole, thus falling into the magical underground world. In this world, a sip of water can shrink to the size of a mouse, and eating a cake can turn you into a giant. Eating the same mushroom on the right will make you shorter, and eating it on the left will make you taller. In this world, it seems that everything you eat is strange.

She also met many people and animals: Dodo, Lizard Bill, Cheshire cat, Mad Hatter, March Rabbit, Dormouse, Mock Turtle, Gryphon and Ugly Duchess. In the big garden behind the small door, she met a whole deck of playing cards, including the rude queen of hearts, the kind king of hearts and the swaggering Jack of hearts.

Alice helped the rabbit find the lost fan and gloves. Later, she helped three gardeners escape the persecution of the Red Queen. She also protested loudly in the absurd court that the king and queen framed good people. In this fantastic and crazy world, it seems that only Alice is a sober person. She kept exploring and asked "Who am I?". In the process of exploration, she constantly knows herself and grows. When she finally grew into a "big" girl, she suddenly woke up and found that all this was a dream of her own.

Extended data:

Although Alice in Wonderland is full of absurd fantasies, the author deeply hints at the social reality of Britain in the middle of19th century. From what Alice has seen and heard, we can feel that this era is full of etiquette and pedantic life breath. For example, the little hero is afraid of constantly reciting the text, like a mouse who is bent on showing off his historical knowledge. It turns out that he only recites textbooks for a long time and doesn't even understand himself. These plots make readers feel that the education methods at that time were rigid and outdated.

In fairy tales, Carol also satirized the pretentious gentleman rabbit, the snobbish and vulgar duchess, the arrogant and violent red queen and so on, and even satirized the Victorian court. All these make readers see seriousness from jokes and realize rationality from absurdity.