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Characterization in the Importance of Being Earnest

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Literary Analysis Sonja Jankovic, group B Characterization in The Importance of Being Earnest Among Oscar Wilde’s varied works, a prominent place has been assumed by a notoriously humorous play The Importance of Being Earnest. Such has been the play’s popularity to this day that countless efforts have been retaken so as to adapting it for modern age due to its scintillating language and the author’s surpassing skill at creating immortal characters. In the attempt to spell out the importance of characterization we shall look at how Oscar Wilde carefully masters each marionette of his imagination for purposes of scornful, and yet irresistibly entartaining satire of Victorian society. To unveil the secret behind the charm of …show more content…

The associations are often rather opaque, such as the names of the servant Lane and Dr Chausable which unequivocally sound like the words plain and chaseable. Pun is deliberate in both cases, alluding to the inferior status of the first and the way in which the latter is percieved by Miss Prism: ˝…by persistently remaining single, a man converts himself into a permanent public temptation. Men should be more careful; this very celibacy leads weaker vessels astray.˝[4] The aforementioned female character is also named after her role in the plot. Although she does not come across as a particularly important character at the beginning of the play, we eventually find out that she was the key person in creating the general confusion by replacing the baby Earnest with her three-volume novel many years before. The significance of her role thus becomes distorted, just like appearances do when seen through a prism. Finally, we are faced with the name Earnest, which is ironically sought by all the characters. For Gwendolen and Cecily the only man whom they can love must be earnest-looking, whereas for Algernon and Jack obtaining the name means facing a fearful ordeal in the attempt to win women’s hearts. Needless to say, the charade lack the earnestness from either of the characters and it is with great unease that Jack understands that coincidentally he has been honest when he falsely introduced himself as Earnest on many banburying occasions: ˝…it is a

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