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Earnest Essay: Inversion In The Importance Of Being

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The Frivolity of Being Earnest: Inversion in The Importance of Being Earnest In Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest, the trivial and superficial override the strict moral ideology of the Victorian period. The play revolves around Jack Worthing, a man who creates a second identity: when he is in the city, he is Jack, and when he is in the country, his name is Ernest. He is engaged to Gwendolen, an aristocratic woman who wishes to only marry a man who is named Ernest. Her haughty aunt, Lady Bracknell, deems Jack unworthy of marrying of Gwendolen because he is an orphan with no knowledge of his parents. Algernon Moncrieff Jack's friend, and nephew of Lady Bracknell, also assumes the Ernest identity in an attempt to woo Cecily, Jack's ward who is a woman who also dreams of marrying a man …show more content…

Ruskin suggests that according to the heterosexual societal expectations of Victorian society, men and women must exist in separate spheres. He states, "...the woman's power is for rule, not for battle,–and her intellect is not for invention or creation, but for sweet ordering, arrangement, and decision...Her great function is Praise...The man, in his rough work in the open world, must encounter all peril and trial...But he guards the woman from all this" (Ruskin 21). While a man is free to explore the outside world, women must stay at home. Though he claims that woman hold power inside the home as a source of incorruptible judgment, they must be "guarded" by men who are free to venture between spheres. He also notes that women are "...incapable of error. So far as she rules, all must be right, or nothing is. She must be...incorruptibly good; infallibly wise" (22-23). In The Importance of Being Earnest, Wilde directly evokes and twists the concept of separate, gendered spheres and expectations by turning this ideology into a

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