Earnest

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    wrong with these practices, he or she may not comprehend how intensely the individuals followed their new current traditions. Author Oscar Wilde thoroughly displays just how people during this time period acted in his play The Importance of Being Earnest. Wilde pokes fun at various elements of the Victorian society. To better understand how Wilde’s play made fun of the Victorian society, one must look at the following elements: manners, triviality and immaturity Author Oscar Wilde wanted to stress

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    In the play by Oscar Wilde “The Importance of Being Earnest”, Wilde takes a comedic stance on a melodrama, portraying the duplicity of Victorian traditions and social values as the modernism of the twentieth century begins to emerge. The idea of the play revolves around its title of the characters discovering the importance of being earnest to their individual preferences. The author uses the traditional efforts of finding a marriage partner to illustrate the conflicting pressure of Victorian values

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    Morality and Foolery In times where earnestness is priority, foolery ensues to escape societal pressure and morality takes a back seat. Oscars Wilde’s play ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’ highlighted this fact with satire. In the Victorian Age of London, outward appearance of seriousness, respect, and societal conformity are of the utmost importance. Citizens of this age were expected to uphold those standards, even above their own happiness and health. With so much pressure to keep up with

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    In order to fully understand the meaning of “The Importance of Being Earnest” and its importance in its time, one must look at Oscar Wilde’s background in relation to the Victorian time period. Biography.com states that Wilde had a very social life, growing up among influential Victorians and intellectuals of the time. As he grew older and became a successful writer, he began engaging in homosexual affairs which was a crime during the 19th century. He eventually started a relationship with Alfred

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    Title The title of the book seems to emphasize the word “Earnest” by describing it as something important. After reading through the play by Oscar Wilde, the title seems to perfectly match with the content and plot described in the book, since it shows the irony behind the title of the importance of being earnest, and the made-up character “Ernest” himself. Jack’s double, Ernest, is a made up character who Jack can transform into in order to be another version of himself. When Jack is residing in

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    The presentation of social class can contrast very highly and remain similar in many forms of drama. Oscar Wilde’s representation of social class in The Importance of Being Earnest draws an interesting comparison with Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House. Oscar Wilde was born in 1854 into a middle-class household in Dublin, Ireland, and later attended Trinity College, Dublin and Magdalen College, Oxford. At Oxford, he was influenced by his middle-class professors, John Ruskin and Walter Pater: Ruskin and

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    The Importance of Being Earnest revolves around substantiality and insignificance. Oscar Wilde, the author, seems to take great delight in making things as un-simple as possible. Although it seems that the primary reason for Oscar Wilde to write this play is to entertain people, he constantly explores what is important and what is trivial, often inverting the two, in an effort to criticize and make people be aware of the social problems of his time. Set in Great Britain at the turn of the century

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    The Importance of Being Earnest shows morality through all the characters in various ways. Each person teaches a different lesson that readers should take away in their everyday lives. For instance, comedy and deception are two ways that Wilde tries to show characters acting immorally. In the Importance of Being Earnest, Oscar Wilde satirizes morality through the characters Algernon, Jack, and Cecily. Throughout the play, Algernon discreetly breaks social norms through bunburying, defying human

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    reasons is portrayed in “The Importance of being Earnest.” In “The Importance of Being Earnest” by Oscar Wilde, Jack and Algernon, are two single men. Jack plays a double life in which he goes by the name of Earnest in the town and Jack in the country. Jack falls in love with Gwendolen who is Algernon’s cousin. Gwendolen falls in love with Jack because his name is Earnest. Then Algernon shows up to Jack’s estate and introduces himself as Earnest, Jack’s made up brother. Algernon falls in love with

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    The Hidden Symbols in The Importance of Being Earnest The Importance of Being Earnest written by Oscar Wilde takes place in 1895 and exposes the hypocritical social expectations of the end of the Victorian era. During the Victorian period, marriage was about protecting your resources and keeping socially unacceptable impulses under control. The play undeniable reveals and focuses satire around differences between the behaviors of the upper class and that of the lower class. Oscar Wilde uses comedic

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