The Importance Of Being Earnest Essay

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    The Importance doesn’t Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde is a satire, comedy play of the Victorian Age. The Importance of Being Earnest follows two main characters, Earnest and Algernon, who live double lives. During his play Wilde makes fun of some of the standards and the way of life during that time. One of the common traits of the time was deception. Wilde’s play has a common occurrence of deception through the play’s plot line, trivial lies, and a character’s point of view on deception. Wilde’s

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    The Importance of being Earnest. After reviewing the play and the movie, I determined that the Importance of Being Earnest is a combination all three elements. The play satirizing the society at the time, but also have elements of a farce and comedy of manners. All in all, the movie held true to novel and represented all these concepts. The satirizing occurs around the education system and upper class people of the day. The farce elements are seen throughout the play. A farce is defined as: “A

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    Oscar Wilde, the writer of The Importance of Being Earnest, celebrated the Victorian Era society while criticizing it in his play. Through his play, he utilized the humorous literary techniques of pun, irony, and satire to comment on the impact of Victorian Era society left on the characters themselves. These comedic literary devices also help to show how the members of this society in the Victorian Era live by a set of unspoken rules that determine politeness, as well as proper etiquette to live

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    Feminist Perspective As seen in The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde, men and women live in a society of inequality between the two sexes as conveyed through double standards. For instance, there is a double standard regarding men and women flirting as seen when Algernon says “She will place me next to Mary Farquhar, who always flirts with her own husband across the dinner-table. That is not very pleasant.” While women are shamed for talking to men whom they are married to, men such as

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    In the Importance of Being Earnest, dramatic irony is throughout the play which leads to many humorous events. Dramatic irony is a type of irony where the audience fully understands the situation while the character is unaware of it. The lack of knowledge the character has about their situation is amusing in the play. First example of dramatic irony that turns into humor is when Jack confesses his love to Gwendolen and she also feels the same way but for a different reason than his. She says, “My

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    Being “earnest” is impossible in Oscar Wilde’s play The Importance of Being Earnest. Earnestness is more often equated with sincerity. Sincerity or earnestness is not only displayed in the title but it is the main theme of Wilde’s work and using satire, the playwright shows the hypocrisy of the morally upstanding, and the inability of the upper and middle class of Victorian England to be earnest. When one thinks of the Victorian English period, the word prudish might come to mind. According to

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    Not Being Earnest in The Importance of Being Earnest  While some critics contend that The Importance of Being Earnest is completely fanciful and has no relation to the real world, others maintain that Oscar Wilde's "trivial comedy for serious people" does make significant comments about social class and the institution of marriage.  These observations include the prevalent utilization of deceit in everyday affairs.  Indeed the characters and plot of the play appear to be

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    TOPIC : THE ACT OF BUNBURYING IS THE CENTRAL TO THE THEME OF THE PLAY. DISCUSS WHY WITH REFERENCE TO QUOTES WITHIN THE TEXT AND THE ERA THE PLAY WAS WRITTEN IN. BUNBURYING- A WORLD OF CHIMERA :- Bunburying was just a way for Jack to break-out of his social duties and responsibilities by giving an excuse to meet an imaginary person (Ernest) created by him itself. The bunburying allows both Jack and Algernon to live an untruth, to give an impression assist the highest ethical standards, while be

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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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    Theatre Studies: Cat One Draft The Importance of Being Earnest is set in late Victorian England, a time of social reform. Society was rediscovering art in its many forms yet as a consequence, The Upper class continued their program of suppressed inferiority. The lower classes were treated with disdain and disgust and the animosity between the groups was easily visible. Essentially, the late Victorian era was the beginning of a mini cultural renaissance, yet Upper Class society, which forms the basis

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    The core of Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest lies within the play-long pun that is conveniently introduced in the very title of it. The most important twist in the entire book is not only is no one being earnest, but no one in the book is actually named Ernest! It follows two characters, the protagonist and his foil, and primarily focuses on their opinions on the world that they live in. The two characters whom bunbury their way through town/the country in order to escape the responsibilities

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    them. Everyone has heard the phrase, “they look like such an *insert name here*”. For example, the name ‘Joe’ is such a common name, one would imagine somebody called by it as ‘just your average Joe’. The characters in Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest highly value names and their meanings. Names are significant in this play because they accentuate the characters’ personalities and motives. Lady Bracknell’s personality makes a bold appearance from the beginning, “I think it is high time

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    John Galsworthy's The Man of Property and Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest epitomize the culture of gender, marriage, and social class in the 19th century. The stereotypes include the power and expectation differences between men and women, marriage for the purpose of gaining, and a strong class separation where the higher class looks down upon the lower classes. Society expected propriety of women in the way to act, dress, and present themselves. The goal: marry a good husband and

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    I have chosen to discuss the issue of society versus the individual in The Importance of Being Earnest and Siddhartha. In both texts there lies the same message; everyone is an individual and will always be, never escaping, people learn and grow by making mistakes and through experiences based on individual decision, simply conforming to a societal ideal will not satisfy any individual in reaching the good life. In Siddhartha, Siddhartha reaches enlightenment by following his inner voice through

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    A Trivial Comedy for Serious People Oscar Wilde mocked his audience while he entertained them. Perhaps his most loved and well-known work, The Importance of Being Earnest, satirises the manners and affections of the upper-class Victorian society. Satire is a literary tone used to ridicule or make fun of human vice or weakness, usually with the intent of changing or correcting the subject of the satirical attack. The play focuses on the elite, while making fun of the ludicrousness and extremity

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    absurd beliefs. Like many satirical plays, The Importance of Being Earnest is deliberately preposterous in nature so as to better ridicule Edwardian social life and cherished ideals. The Importance of Being Earnest is a stinging indictment of upper class British society of the time. The ingenious play mocks the concepts of aristocracy and love in Edwardian society, and addresses the notion of treating all important matters of life with genuine and earnest triviality. Much of the subtle and

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    In The Importance of Being Earnest, Oscar Wilde uses comedic inversions on the topic of love and marriage to criticize and to humorously mock accepted social norms during the Victorian Age. Wilde uses Lady Bracknell’s requirements for a suitable mate for Gwendolyn’s marriage to create humor in something that society takes seriously. After hearing that Jack plans to propose to Gwendolen, Lady Bracknell realizes she must interview him to determine his suitability. She sits him down and asserts, “I

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    of The Importance of Being Earnest and The Picture of Dorian Gray throughout the existence in Victorian Society by exemplifying the truth and honesty the society doesn’t carry with them. The Victorian society does not engage in speaking of the truth and the involvement of staying honest between others. Due to trust running deep within these two terms, one must understand that the Victorian society had some trust issues between persons. As one has noticed within The Importance of Being Earnest, Jack

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    In Oscar Wilde’s play, “The Importance of Being Earnest,” Food is everywhere. Food not only plays a large part in furthering the plot, it also gives the characters a time to express how they feel both directly and indirectly. In this play, there are three main events where food furthers the plot. In Act 1, Algernon has a plate of cucumber sandwiches for Lady Bracknell. While eating them, Algernon refuses to let Jack have one, claiming they are made for Aunt Augusta. When she finally arrives

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    The play, The Importance of Being Earnest written by Oscar Wilde, describes two main protagonists living in 1890's England, Jack Worthing and Algernon Moncrieff (Algy), who, for the sake of love, both use the same name (Ernest) to conceal their true identity. Algy has a cousin named Gwendolen Fairfax, whom Jack is in deep love with. On the other hand, Algy falls in love with Jack's ward, who is Cecily Cardew. At first, everything goes well, until both Jack and Algy end up together in the country

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