, 3 ESSAYS PROVIDED
Narrative and Stylistic Analysis of Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
Lewis Carroll’s extract from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865) presents Alice’s descent
down the rabbit hole as both a physical and psychological journey into the unknown. Through
imaginative narrative techniques and playful stylistic choices, Carroll constructs a dreamlike
world that reflects Alice’s curiosity, confusion, and developing reasoning. This essay analyses
three narrative techniques—setting, characterisation, and point of view—and three stylistic
elements—imagery, diction, and sentence structure—to show how meaning is created and how
the reader is guided through Alice’s experience.
The setting is central to the passage and is established through Alice’s continuous fall “down,
down, down.” The repetition creates a sense of endless descent, suggesting a space without
normal physical boundaries. The environment is undefined, which makes it feel suspended
between reality and fantasy. Alice tries to impose logic on this experience by calculating distance,
thinking she might be “four thousand miles down” and near the “centre of the earth.” This
attempt shows how she relies on learned knowledge to make sense of confusion. The setting
therefore becomes unstable and disorienting, reflecting Alice’s loss of control and the reader’s
sense of uncertainty.
Characterisation is developed through Alice’s mixture of intelligence, innocence, and
imagination. She draws on school knowledge when she refers to “Latitude or Longitude,” but the
narrator makes it clear that she does not understand these terms. This creates dramatic irony
because she uses impressive-sounding words without meaning. Her behaviour shows a child
trying to appear knowledgeable while still thinking in a playful and imaginative way. Her
concern for Dinah, her cat, introduces emotional depth and shows that even in confusion she
remains connected to home. Her idea of curtseying while falling highlights her adherence to
social behaviour despite the absurd situation.
The point of view is third-person omniscient but closely aligned with Alice’s thoughts. The
narrator reports her speech while also explaining her thinking process. This allows the reader to
hear Alice’s internal monologue while also understanding the irony behind it. Her thoughts are
Narrative and Stylistic Analysis of Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
Lewis Carroll’s extract from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865) presents Alice’s descent
down the rabbit hole as both a physical and psychological journey into the unknown. Through
imaginative narrative techniques and playful stylistic choices, Carroll constructs a dreamlike
world that reflects Alice’s curiosity, confusion, and developing reasoning. This essay analyses
three narrative techniques—setting, characterisation, and point of view—and three stylistic
elements—imagery, diction, and sentence structure—to show how meaning is created and how
the reader is guided through Alice’s experience.
The setting is central to the passage and is established through Alice’s continuous fall “down,
down, down.” The repetition creates a sense of endless descent, suggesting a space without
normal physical boundaries. The environment is undefined, which makes it feel suspended
between reality and fantasy. Alice tries to impose logic on this experience by calculating distance,
thinking she might be “four thousand miles down” and near the “centre of the earth.” This
attempt shows how she relies on learned knowledge to make sense of confusion. The setting
therefore becomes unstable and disorienting, reflecting Alice’s loss of control and the reader’s
sense of uncertainty.
Characterisation is developed through Alice’s mixture of intelligence, innocence, and
imagination. She draws on school knowledge when she refers to “Latitude or Longitude,” but the
narrator makes it clear that she does not understand these terms. This creates dramatic irony
because she uses impressive-sounding words without meaning. Her behaviour shows a child
trying to appear knowledgeable while still thinking in a playful and imaginative way. Her
concern for Dinah, her cat, introduces emotional depth and shows that even in confusion she
remains connected to home. Her idea of curtseying while falling highlights her adherence to
social behaviour despite the absurd situation.
The point of view is third-person omniscient but closely aligned with Alice’s thoughts. The
narrator reports her speech while also explaining her thinking process. This allows the reader to
hear Alice’s internal monologue while also understanding the irony behind it. Her thoughts are