Alice in Wonderland
a X rendition | 2025
Alice in Wonderland
a X rendition | 2025
Alice in Wonderland
a X rendition | 2025

X, formerly Twitter, is defined by its hashtags. While exploring the app, I realized my investigative approach led me to dig into trends rather than judge them by a single tweet. This led me to #cancel and the idea of Cancel Culture.
Reading Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, I saw a parallel between the Queen of Hearts’ impulsive “Off with your head!” and how #cancel spreads on X. People rarely reconsider their online judgments, and this rendition explores that connection.
I selected Chapter VIII – The Queen’s Croquet-Ground and Chapter XI – Who Stole the Tarts? to reflect the volatility of user behavior on X—how easily opinions shift and how unreliable online judgment can be.
Visually, I contrasted “light mode” and “dark mode” X inserts. Light mode adapts text into X formats, like a thread on page 5 mimicking the cards’ chaotic talk. Dark mode uses real #cancel screenshots, placed to mirror the text’s unpredictability—such as spread 12-13, where scattered posts echo the hedgehog and flamingo’s disruptions.
At the end, a dark-themed X account deletion page merges both modes, tying Alice’s choice to leave Wonderland with the realization of how similar these worlds truly are.
X, formerly Twitter, is defined by its hashtags. While exploring the app, I realized my investigative approach led me to dig into trends rather than judge them by a single tweet. This led me to #cancel and the idea of Cancel Culture.
Reading Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, I saw a parallel between the Queen of Hearts’ impulsive “Off with your head!” and how #cancel spreads on X. People rarely reconsider their online judgments, and this rendition explores that connection.
I selected Chapter VIII – The Queen’s Croquet-Ground and Chapter XI – Who Stole the Tarts? to reflect the volatility of user behavior on X—how easily opinions shift and how unreliable online judgment can be.
Visually, I contrasted “light mode” and “dark mode” X inserts. Light mode adapts text into X formats, like a thread on page 5 mimicking the cards’ chaotic talk. Dark mode uses real #cancel screenshots, placed to mirror the text’s unpredictability—such as spread 12-13, where scattered posts echo the hedgehog and flamingo’s disruptions.
At the end, a dark-themed X account deletion page merges both modes, tying Alice’s choice to leave Wonderland with the realization of how similar these worlds truly are.







































Like what you saw? Let's work together!

Like what you saw? Let's work together!
