A variation on the theme, as was done for the Mad Hatter, now is the time of Alice, but the white rabbit always loses! Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (often contract in Alice in Wonderland, original title Alice's Adventures in Wonderland) is a literary first published in 1865 written by the English mathematician and author Reverend Charles Lutwidge Dodgson under the more well-known pseudonym Lewis Carroll.Il story is full of allusions to characters, poems, proverbs and events of the period in which Dodgson's work and "Wonderland" described in the tale plays with logic rules, linguistic, physical and mathematical that have done well to earn the reputation he has. This book has a sequel called Through the mirror and what Alice found there. In most cases, the theatrical and cinematic adaptations prefer to merge elements of both. The American mathematician Martin Gardner has published a work entitled The Annotated Alice restated the text of both books is enriched by numerous explanatory notes explained, inter alia, references to the various more or less well-known poems in Victorian parodies Dodgson proposes in her books.
giovedì 22 luglio 2010
ALICE IN " MURDERLAND"
A variation on the theme, as was done for the Mad Hatter, now is the time of Alice, but the white rabbit always loses! Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (often contract in Alice in Wonderland, original title Alice's Adventures in Wonderland) is a literary first published in 1865 written by the English mathematician and author Reverend Charles Lutwidge Dodgson under the more well-known pseudonym Lewis Carroll.Il story is full of allusions to characters, poems, proverbs and events of the period in which Dodgson's work and "Wonderland" described in the tale plays with logic rules, linguistic, physical and mathematical that have done well to earn the reputation he has. This book has a sequel called Through the mirror and what Alice found there. In most cases, the theatrical and cinematic adaptations prefer to merge elements of both. The American mathematician Martin Gardner has published a work entitled The Annotated Alice restated the text of both books is enriched by numerous explanatory notes explained, inter alia, references to the various more or less well-known poems in Victorian parodies Dodgson proposes in her books.
Etichette:
"Paese delle meraviglie",
Alice,
Alice nel paese delle meraviglie,
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland,
Attraverso lo Specchio e quel che Alice vi trovò,
Cappellaio Matto,
Charles Lutwidge Dodgson,
coniglio bianco,
illustrazione,
Le avventure di Alice nel Paese delle Meraviglie,
Lewis Carroll,
Martin Gardner,
personaggi,
poemetti,
proverbi,
The Annotated Alice
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