Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland satirizes and inverts various social structures and power dynamics of 19th century English society. The story, which was inspired by real conversations Carroll had with Alice Liddell, features nonsensical characters and scenarios that undermine expectations around family, etiquette, language, monarchy, and justice. Throughout the story, Alice struggles to navigate a topsy-turvy world where no rules seem to apply consistently. The work questions how individuals can function within societies with changing rules and no clear means of communication or fairness.