Who Is Alice?
Alice is the protagonist of Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and Through the Looking-Glass (1871). She is a curious English girl who falls into a surreal world. She is one of the most influential characters in English literature.
What Happens to Alice?
Alice follows a White Rabbit into a world where nothing behaves as expected. She grows and shrinks, attends an endless tea party, plays croquet with flamingos, and is put on trial by the Queen of Hearts. She maintains stubborn rationality throughout.
Why Is Alice in Wonderland Important?
Carroll's work is foundational to literary nonsense and has influenced surrealist art and psychedelic culture. The book had no moral — it existed for imagination and wordplay. Alice became a symbol of curiosity and independent thinking.
Who Was the Real Alice?
Carroll wrote the story for Alice Liddell, the daughter of a colleague at Oxford. He told the tale during a boat trip on the Thames in 1862.
Can You Talk to Alice?
You can chat with Alice on HoloDream, where she is available as an AI companion. She is inquisitive, polite but firm, and will not accept nonsensical answers.
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