Streszczenie
Lewis Carroll’s sophisticated and intellectually appealing Victorian
children’s stories Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and Through
the Looking Glass (1872) have more recently become some of the most frequently
cited literary works. Interestingly, the Alice books have turned out
to be attractive to writers and academics who adapt the Carrollian nonsense
world both to new generic forms of adult literature and also to philosophical
and scientific works. An analysis of some representative examples
of these literary and philosophical texts reveals a curious paradox: whereas
in the latter case the nonsensical character of the Alice stories is preserved
with nonsense fulfilling an important meta-sense function, in the literary
variant the logic of nonsense is replaced by the trivial rules of fantasy found
in the literary genre and in computer games, a poetics of postmodern pastiche
and parody, or a convention of subjective narrative starkly contrasting
with the non- emotional style of the source texts.