Oscar Wilde Importance of Being Earnest Essay

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    works of different categories–writing conventions do not change how works are experienced. Oscar Wilde’s comedic play The Importance of Being Earnest, and William Butler Yeats’s somber poem, “The Wild Swans at Coole,” evoke emotional responses in a reader, and these responses are often shaped by the work itself, culture, and individual experiences. Wilde uses absurd humor in The Importance of Being Earnest to undercut some societal establishments and highlight the lengths people will go to have an

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    The Importance of Being Earnest’s maze of ludicrous and comical events unveils solidity and drawbacks to how the plot develops. The plot is securely built through Jack and Algernon, who set forth a chain of hilarious consequences due to their actions of wanting to escape their daily troubles and deceiving everyone around them, including Gwendolen and Cecily, with imaginative identities. In effect, this causes consistent anticipation for what is going to happen next from the audience and allows them

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    Social classes are obvious in the Victorian period in England. The way they have grown up were different and the environment were also dissimilar. Inside the book “ The Importance of Being Earnest” there were upper class, middle class and lower class. Those three classes have differences between living style, speaking tone and values toward marriage. Living style could include their leisure, entertainment and eating. Algernon is a higher class that lives in London. Whenever he wants to escape dinner

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    Our movie trailer portrayed the theme of gender roles in Victorian society being reversed in The Importance of Being Earnest. Dan played Mrs. Bracknell, he was shown knitting in his home and eating by himself, while being isolated from the political and social life in Britain. The audience watching the play would have been upset because men were supposed to be involved in politics and business while women were confined to doing chores at home and taking care of the children. Another example of the

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    Over the course of this semester, the class has read and discussed four plays. The four plays include Madea, Oedipus, The Tempest and The Importance of Being Earnest. These plays all have strong female and male characters. Around the time all of these plays were written, women were not looked upon favorably. Women were viewed as superficial, deceptive and dangerous. Female Roles Most of the female roles we read about were mothers. In the play, Madea Euripedes portrayed Madea as a revengeful psychotic

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    The gender roles, homosexuality, and class rank issues brought forth in the play are all big issues that fueled the presidential candidate’s campaigns during this election. At the time of the performance here at the University of Iowa, students were being strongly encouraged to consider these issues as

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    The Importance of Being Earnest is one of Oscar Wilde’s crowning masterpieces. The acclaimed comedic play tells the tale of Jack Worthing and the mischief he causes when he and his best friend, Algernon Moncrieff, assume double identities. When analyzing the play from various critical perspectives, the reader can divulge into the various historical roots and gender roles that the author uses to promote his message and criticize the Victorian upper class. Evaluating the play from a historical

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    In the Importance of Being Earnest, Oscar Wilde creates two completely different identities for two of the main characters, in two entirely different settings. One of the settings takes place in a town in England and the other takes place in Hertfordshire, in the country. I believe that Wilde purposely did that to reflect on the characters that he wanted to portray. When Jack Worthing is in the country, where he resides, he is a well-respected, wealthy man that a lot of depend on. He is a major landowner

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    “To Live is to Be”: Existentialism in Heart of Darkness, Lord Jim, and The Importance of Being Earnest During the modernist era of literature; a recurrent theme was prevalent in their works of art. The idea of existentialism revolving around the notion that you first experience life before you can begin to exist and understand yourself. This ideology stemmed from the main fear of the era; the end of the century. The fear of the unknown; the fear of what was to come in the following century (if it

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    Dorian Gray Death Essay

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    itself across a man's face. It cannot be concealed. People talk sometimes of secret vices. There are no such things. If a wretched man has a vice, it shows itself in the lines of his mouth, the droop of his eyelids, the moulding of his hands even..." (Wilde pg.

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