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This chapter explores how literary nonsense uses the contrasting spaces of the country and the city to question social, cultural, and political ideas. Through imaginative landscapes, absurd settings, and playful narratives, nonsense literature transforms familiar places into symbolic environments that challenge conventional boundaries and expectations. The chapter examines how rural and urban spaces represent different forms of identity, authority, freedom, and social order while revealing tensions between nature and civilization. By analyzing these spatial dynamics, readers gain insight into how authors employ humor, fantasy, and linguistic experimentation to critique real-world assumptions about place, belonging, power, and the relationship between environment and human experience.
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