The French philosopher Gilles Deleuze's intense engagement with Lacanian psychoanalysis in The Logic of Sense is frequently problematized as an inconsistent phase in his thought. This article argues that the relationship between the series and the events that Deleuze builds in this book highlights it as a coherent part of his philosophical project. By concentrating on Deleuze's reading of the English writer Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, the article suggests that similar to Alice's “telescope body,” the series of The Logic of Sense include movements of opening and shutting up in the events that create their effects through the differences in the signifying chain. These differences stem from an encounter of the homogeneous...