Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest was written during the Modernism movement. Modernism was a literary movement that pushed back against the movement previously: Victorian/Realism. Wilde suggests that keeping up appearances was so significant during the Victorian ages that men engaged in bunburying: the idea that people take on a different persona, whether real or imagined, as an escape from their current life or in order to portray themselves in a better light. Wilde uses satirical humor in The Importance of Being Earnest to reveal his disdain at the hypocritical customs and shallow lives of the Victorian people; in particular, Wilde uses the concept of bunburying to reveal their own hypocrisy to themselves. …show more content…
Both theories suggest that Bunbury represents actual people rather than a concept. The theory of attributively naming Bunbury stems from Wilde’s own double life. According to Green’s article, “an unidentified book reviewer for Time magazine states that “Bunburying was shorthand for a visit to a fashionable London male whorehouse” and suggested that the word bunburying is related to berging – “the disguise of homosexual material in literature” (Green 70). Green also suggests that this definition “has its origin in details brought out at the trials about Wilde’s own double life in which he shuttled between Alfred Taylor’s male whorehouse and the brilliant world of Victorian high society” (Green 70). Seemingly, Bunbury may actually be an imaginary manifestation of Wilde himself, who struggled with his own homosexuality while attempting to maintain his status in society. The other theory that may explain Bunbury’s existence is the fact that he was named after a direct individual: Henry Shirley Bunbury, who went to school with Wilde (Green 73). The theory of Bunbury being named after Henry Shirley Bunbury makes sense here: Green states that Henry Shirley Bunbury “did have elements of a double life in him, for while he earned his living as a government tax official, he was quite interested in
Social norms and expectations have the capacity to constrain people to live within a certain standard. When this standard becomes overwhelming, people tend to look for ways to temporarily escape their lives. Fortunately, there are several possible options that grant such escape, wearing social masks being one of them. Social masks allow people to hide their true identities from others as they live their desired lives, protecting their real social images. In Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest, Jack’s and Algy’s method of bunburying strongly correlates to this mean of escape. As readers analyze how bunburying works towards Jack’s and Algy’s advantage, it becomes clear that bunburying fundamentally gives these two characters a social mask that allows them to become distinctly different characters.
… “Besides now that I know you to be a confirmed Bunburyist, I naturally want to talk to you about Bunburying. I want to tell you the rules.
In order to fully comprehend the significance of dishonesty throughout The Importance of Being Earnest, it is important to understand just how strict the Victorian
“The Importance of Being Earnest,” a satirical play written by Oscar Wilde, discusses a vast variety of criticisms regarding the late Victorian societal period. In this comedic drama, focusing on and analyzing certain minor characters leads to a more effective interpretation of the messages attempting to be portrayed to the audience. For example, through the persona of Lady Bracknell, Wilde effectively mocks the concept of marriage for social status rather than love. Additionally, interpreting the roles of the lower class servants allows the readers to internalize the desperate need for social reform that the author felt at the time period. Finally, the entire concept of Bunburyism, or masquerading as an alternate persona, satirizes the hypocrisy of the Victorian Era.
The life of the Victorian people was a time in which people were prude because of their repression. Many of the people of that time had a lot of pent-up emotions, there was a time and a place for something and it solemn did any good for anyone, depending on your class you had to have a curtain way of carrying yourself, many of which was not the must enjoyable of ways and lacked some fun that many need in their life. This forced many to split their Public life from the Private one. Written in the Victorian Era, the works of The importance of being earnest by Oscar Wilde, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson ,and Frankenstein by Mary Shelley displays how
Wilde’s characters are identified through their sexual preferences and attitudes. These preferences and attitudes create the characters themselves. Algernon, is an upper-class aristocrat whom is always overdressed. Caring much about his appearance and pleasure. Algernon, has made up fictional character Bunbury in order that he may escape the mundane life and live only for pleasure. Jack is a young immature man with a lot of responsibilities. Jack creates the fictional character
Jack Worthing and Algernon Moncrieff are both high-class protagonists in society but are lying about their lives to preserve their reputations. “You have invented a very useful younger brother called Ernest, in order that you may be able to come up to town . . . I have invented an invaluable permanent invalid called Bunbury . . . ” (Wilde 1498). Ernest is Jack’s fictional brother, who always gets into mischief and uses him an excuse to go into town. Likewise, Algernon uses Bunbury, his fictitious and ill friend, to allow him to go to the country. These characters enable these gentlemen to retreat from their social obligations. Missing an essential reception to aid their “brother” or “friend,” gives the appearance that they are caring men, which is an admirable trait among the rich, but they are not. The name “Bunbury” is an interesting name
Oscar Wilde uses his witty criticism of Victorian immorality to argue what true morality is. In this period of time it was normal for people to lie and it was okay. He takes a satirist view on how the people of this time period generally acted. Victor Frankenstein believed he could create something beautiful out of death, but ended up creating destruction. It did not go quite as planned though, Victor was instantly horrified when he saw the monster he had created.
Oscar Wilde was a figurehead for a larger cause in the late nineteenth century. His reality crumbled under the cognitive dissonance of the high-class aristocrats and their struggle to find any reason to overthrow those who are cognizant enough to see and react to said dissonance. What are best known as the Wilde trials, consisted of using completely fictional literature as evidence to real events. Wilde’s novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray was a tool used to undermine Wilde’s authority and testimony about his personal romantic encounters. While, the book may hold status as a revolutionary novel about exploring ideas, the Victorians did not think as much once they took a closer look. Once a popular novel about high-class society soon became an object of severe scrutiny and libel for the author. The Victorians began to change how they perceived the entire English language. The aesthetics that they once sought after were now being thrown into question.
Cecily and Gwendolen were perfectly happy to become attached to something that appears to be true and real rather than taking a closer look to expose the genuine nature of Jack and Algernon proves that the two young women were more attached to the name of both men, and did not consider their actions and words to verify them not being earnest – exposing both women as superficial. Algernon’s occupation with his outer appearance and Lady Bracknell’s need to look good in the eyes of others proves them both to be superficially committed to their external manifestations. It is possible that Wilde was revealing what the upper class life resulted in, and that as one rises higher in status one loses themselves, becoming preoccupied with what others want and what others think, forgetting one’s true
It is a well known phenomenon that many authors' lives are reflected through a character in their work. In Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest, the double life, or double identity, can be seen as the central metaphor in the play, epitomized in Algernon's creation of "Bunbury" or "Bunburying". As this term is the only fictitious word employed throughout the text, it is crucial to critically analyze not only its use and implications, but more importantly, the character who coins the term; Algernon Moncrieff. In addition, it is also significant to note the marked differences between Algernon and Jack's perceptions of the notion of bunburying, as it further develops Algernon's character within the text. But perhaps the single most
Oscar Wilde's, "The Importance of Being Earnest" revolves around the dichotomy of the true definition of honesty versus the victorian definition of honesty. It is apparent that Wilde's opinion is that true honesty is expressed through being genuine to one's self as opposed to putting on a front as is important in victorian ideals. In this work, Wilde uses humor to off-set the seriousness of the theme of the story. One who has studied this work can also clearly see that Wilde is using sarcasm to say things that would not have been accepted by society if they were said bluntly. For example he exemplifies in a very sarcastic manner the hypocracy that victorian society represents by the very fact that they pretend to uphold honesty above all
In Wilde's opinion Victorians who want to retain the respect of the conventional society lead double life- one respectable and one frivolous. He creates a world in which the laws of the society have no power and the double life can be revealed. Bunburyism is a way of life which offers relief from the restrictive social norms.
Gender fluidity through the characters’ personalities and actions is subtly utilized in both plays to comment on the social traits expected of both sexes. In The Importance of Being Earnest, Jack and Algernon exhibit immature personalities through their Bunburying. When Algy says to Jack, "I have invented an invaluable permanent invalid called Bunbury, in order that I may be able to go down into the country whenever I choose" (Wilde, 301), it demonstrates Algernon’s yearning for an aesthetic life free from the social correctness. The same behaviour is seen in Jack through his creation of Ernest, and Algy’s comment on Jack being “one of the most advanced Bunburyists I know” (|Wilde ?301). Their desire to escape the monotonous routine of their daily lives reveals their
For Wilde, the word earnest comprised two different but related ideas: the notion of false truth and the notion of false morality, or moralism. The moralism of Victorian society—its smugness and pomposity—impels Algernon and Jack to invent fictitious alter egos so as to be able to escape the strictures of propriety and decency. However, what one member of society considers decent or indecent doesn’t always reflect what decency really is. One of the play’s paradoxes is the impossibility of actually being either earnest (meaning “serious” or “sincere”) or moral while claiming to be so. The