Alicia in Terra Mirabili

Alicia in terra mirabili (titulo originali Anglico Alice's Adventures in Wonderland) est liber a Ludovico Carroll anno 1865 scriptus et a Clive Harcourt Carruthers anno 1964 Latine redditus. Liber est mythistoria de Alicia, puella quae in cavum cuniculi cadit et terram mirabilem invenit.
Una e notissimis operibus Victoriae Anglicae fictio, eius narratio, structura, indoles et imaginatio magnam vim habuerunt in popularibus culturae et litterarum, praesertim in genere phantasiae.[2][3][4] Liber saltem 97 in linguas translatus est.[5]
Carroll anno 1871 sequelam edidit inscriptam Through the Looking Glass (Aliciae per speculum transitus) et versio abbreviata pro parvulis anno 1890 inscriptam The Nursery "Alice".
Personae[recensere | fontem recensere]


- Alicia
- Cuniculus Albus
- Gaius
- Eruca
- Pedisequus
- Ducissa
- Feles Cestriana
- Lepus Martius
- Petasivenditor
- Glis
- Rex Cordium
- Regina Cordium
- Gryps
- Testudo Subditiva
Editiones[recensere | fontem recensere]
- Ludovici Carroll, Alicia in terra mirabili, Liber notissimus Latine redditus ab eius fautore vetere gratoque Clive Harcourt Carruthers, London, Macmillan, 1964
Nexus interni
- Aliciae per speculum transitus
- Aequalitas resultati
- Jabberwocky
- Libri Latine redditi
- Ludovicus Carroll
- Portmanteau
Bibliographia[recensere | fontem recensere]
- Carpenter, Humphrey. 1985. Secret Gardens: The Golden Age of Children's Literature. Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0-395-35293-2.
- Gardner, Martin. 2000. The Annotated Alice: The Definitive Edition. Novi Eboraci et Londinii: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-04847-0.
- Ray, Gordon Norton. 1991. The Illustrator and the book in England from 1790 to 1914. Novi Eboraci: Dover. ISBN 0-486-26955-8. (Paginae selectae apud Google Books)
Nexus externi[recensere | fontem recensere]
- Alicia in Terra Mirabili Latine redditus ab eius fautore vetere gratoque Clive Harcourt Carruthers. Londinii: Macmillan, 1964. (idem in Intratext)
![]() |
Haec stipula ad litteras spectat. Amplifica, si potes! |
- ↑ "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland". University of Maryland
- ↑ Schwab, Gabriele (1996) "Chapter 2: Nonsense and Metacommunication: Alice in Wonderland" in The mirror and the killer-queen: otherness in literary language Indiana University Press, Bloomington, Indiana. Formula:ISBN. pp. 49–102.
- ↑ Berman, Judy (15 October 2020). "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll"
- ↑ "The 100 best novels: No 18 – Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll (1865)"
- ↑ Bandersnatch: The Newsletter of The Lewis Carroll Society, Issue 149 (January 2011). p. 11.