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The Importance Of Being Earnest By Oscar Wilde

Decent Essays

The Importance of Being Earnest is a comedic play that was written by Oscar Wilde in the late 1800s. He believed that people in the Victorian Era took life too seriously. He wrote this play with various forms of satire to ridicule the strict lifestyle the upper-class were boxed into. The upper class had pretentious values and behaviors that characterized Victorian life. During the Victorian Era, people were living under Queen Victoria’s monarch. During her reign, “Queen Victoria, conveyed connotations of "prudish, "repressed," and "old fashioned" (Roth). Wilde used the Victorian ideals to ridicule the upper-class by using satire in his play. The upper-class would have been the ones in the audience watching the play and they should have realized his use of satire to mock their attitudes and pretentious values. Oscar Wilde satirizes marriage, honesty, and sexuality throughout the play that the upper-class would be attending. In the Victorian Era, marriage was viewed as being a means to be financially successful. Marriage was a matter of convenience for money more than for love and it was a careful selection process. It provided social status and the money would stay within the bounds of a few wealthy families. Marriage was a legal contract between consenting families of similar fortunes; love and happiness were not the focus. We read that Gwendolyn’s mother, Lady Bracknell, was not pleased with Jack’s background. His social standing was not up to the standards

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