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##rtance Of Being Earnest And Oscar Wilde's Aladdin

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By exploring the pivotal themes cloaked in the tongue and cheek snark in Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest and Walt Disney’s Aladdin, this essay will encompass the coinciding theme of personal navigation amongst different social classes as displayed through the emphasis of homogamy in society and the subsequent motivations for duplicity. The play, The Importance of Being Earnest is a comedy of manners, which focuses on two gentlemen, John Worthing and Algernon Moncrieff, who both claim to be the fabricated Ernest Worthing in order to procure their chosen brides in England during the Victorian Era. The play takes viewers through a whirlwind of hilarity, as the two men try to save face after being exposed as utterly two faced. In the same fashion, Walt Disney’s Aladdin chronicles the protagonist’s, Aladdin, struggle to prevail over the label of “street rat” placed upon him due to the status of being an orphaned street urchin. In the hope that he can obtain the freedom to marry the Princess of Agrabah, Jasmine, who is required by law to marry a Prince. Guided by a magical genie, in addition he is accompanied by a feisty monkey companion and magical carpet, Aladdin struggles comically to impress Jasmine whilst pretending to be a Prince. Throughout both stories there are two characters that unexpectedly serve as a moral compass, by weaving themselves throughout the major themes.
In particular, both stories would not exist without the element of class conflict, strict rules of etiquette, and even laws that regulated the behavior of the different classes. Algernon, for instance, is an upper class gentleman who was expected to be “both serious and moral,” also it was customary “to cultivate their talents and assets for the benefit of others, not themselves” (Girouard 50). However, when Algernon’s introduction he exclaims,
I’m sorry for that, for your sake. I don’t play accurately--any one can play accurately--but
I play with wonderful expression. As far as the piano is concerned, sentiment is my forte.
I keep Science for life (Wilde Act I)
This quote sets up a good baseline for Algernon throughout the play, for in this one line shows that while he is expected to play accurately by society he

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