Oscar Wilde Importance of Being Earnest Essay

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    Although ‘The importance of being Earnest’ was situated more than 100 years ago, Wilde’s depiction of the Victorian upper classes could easily be a description of the current time and society in Pakistan. In the late 1890’s, the elite class of the English society talked in a dignified, proper manner. Everything they said had either a positive or negative effect on their family members, associates, even themselves. Basically it was all a show people put on to stay on the non-scandalous side of society

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    Answer 3: Food plays an important part in any situation; it can make or break the problems. In the Importance of Being Earnest, food plays a very vital role in helping create movement in the plot. The play, importance of being earnest by Oscar Wilde uses food as an essential motif /symbol of an act of working out problems. Set in the Victorian era the tea time custom is vastly a part of the play. From the very beginning where Algernon is questioned about the “cucumber sandwiches” he claims “I believe

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    create irony within the play, allowing readers to know something the characters might not. When The Importance of Being Earnest is being performed on stage, spectators actually get to see the stage directions performed rather than just reading

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    revolutions all started because of social class. Social class is an aspect that has been covered by numerous novels, stories, articles and even plays. A major play that has covered the aspect of social class was “The Importance of Being Earnest”, by Oscar Wilde, published in 1899. Oscar Wilde used certain characters to depict the aspect of social class; like Lady Bracknell. Lady Bracknell played an important role in the play that conveyed the aspect of social class and various parts of it. Therefore,

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    Alternate Reality In The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde, Jack and Algernon both pretend to be someone they’re not so they can be with the girls they think they love. Cecily, on the other hand, does not take on a false persona, but she loses herself in her diary and fantasies. Jack, Algernon, and Cecily have a false perception in life in one way or another, and all are searching for something within their own life. Jack Worthing, the main character, takes on a false identity to be able

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    The Importance of Being Earnest The title of the book I read for my summer reading is called The Importance of Being Earnest which is a drama book written by Oscar Wilde. It was set in London in the year of 1895. A constant theme throughout this book was marriage beginning with Lane and Algernon discussion. Everyone has different ideas of what marriage is, Lane believes it is a pleasant state, Algernon and Jack discuss if it's for business or pleasure. Lady Bracknell believes that it should be a

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    Homosexuality in Oscar Wilde's Work       "I turned half way around and saw Dorian Gray for the first time. I knew that I had come face to face with someone whose mere personality was so fascinating that, if I allowed it to do so, it would absorb my whole nature, my whole soul, my very art itself" (7). During the Victorian era, this was a dangerous quote. The Victorian era was about progress. It was an attempt aimed at cleaning up the society and setting a moral standard. The Victorian era

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    struggled to find their identity within the social structures of their time. In play “The Importance of Being Earnest” by Oscar Wilde, the leading character of Jack Worthing struggles with the standards that are set for him by Victorian Era England. This short play, “The Importance of Being Earnest”, takes place in London near the middle of the Victorian Era. In this era, there were definite barriers set in place.

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    prostitutes Wilde had hired, as evidence of Wilde’s homosexuality. He was then arrested for “sodomy,” tried, and sentenced to prison with hard labor for two years. Many close friends abandoned Wilde, his books and plays went out of business, and belongings of his auctioned off at low prices. The press covered the situation gleefully and profited off of ridiculing him while preserving the Marquis’ reputation. During his imprisonment, his wife and children moved and changed their family name. Wilde lost

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    In the play the Importance of being earnest, written by Oscar Wilde in the 1895, Gwendolen, the daughter of Augusta Bracknell, becomes fixated to the name Ernest. The play itself focuses on two men, Jack and Algernon, who have created false identities and eventually get stuck up in their own lies when the truth is revealed. Gwendolen represents her mother in some approach, as both are strong-minded and sophisticated, thus she evolves a quixotic obsession over the name Earnest Although Gwendolen

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