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The Importance Of Being Earnest By Oscar Wilde

Decent Essays

Earnest Hypocrisy In Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest, two gentlemen exemplify the result of dishonesty and hypocrisy. Set in Victorian England, the two bachelors, Algernon and Jack, fight over which one of them will take the name Ernest in order to win their own girl. Wilde circumvents conventionalism and employs superior satirical strategy to not only teach the importance of being earnest, a characteristic held dear by Victorian society, but he also chastises his world for the hypocrisy between man and woman and between upper and lower classes. Earnest does more than criticize Victorian society: the play remains humorous and entertaining despite its underlying message. The play has been dismissed as one that “never transcends, as a work of art, the incomplete or the trivial” (Roditi 94). However, for a farce that unconventionally illustrates the importance of honesty, Wilde has undoubtedly written a “farce that is meaningful” (Reinert 1) and one that teaches the value of sincerity through the entertaining, exaggerated absurdity of the predicament. While Jack is in the city under the guise of Ernest, he initially refuses to share his address in the country to Algernon so that he may continue keeping his spheres of nomenclature separated. Jack, who has been engaged in flirtatious conversation with Gwendolen, shares his country address with her; he is unaware that Algernon is well within earshot and takes the opportunity to write the address on his shirt cuff.

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