The Importance Of Being Earnest Essay

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    The Importance of Being Earnest is set in the Victorian Era where social class is important. Social interactions were independent within an upper class and the lower class. The upper class kept their social interaction strictly within their class. When it came to the issue of marriage, it was the same. People in the upper class would only marry in their respected class in order to maintain or improve their financial status. Names were important because of their reputations in the upper class. Being

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    The huge issue that ‘The importance of being earnest’ raises is whether marriage was based on love or whether it was to just used to achieve a higher social status. Wilde portrays the different views on marriage through the characters of the play. Whilst Algernon is rather negative about marriage and doesn’t see it as anything more than a business deal, the character Gwendolyn seems to respect the values of marriage. Wilde keeps on ridiculing the social traditions and disposition of the noble class

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    Social Status in Persuasion and The Importance of Being Earnest Social status refers to a person 's position or importance within a society. I have done some research and have acquired information over the way social status is addressed in both the writings of Jane Austen and Oscar Wilde. In the novel Persuasion we can see how the characters go beyond their means to uphold their title and social value. In the play The Importance of Being Earnest we can see how the social rank and wealth of a person

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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 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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    Meghan DuPree English 2322 Bardenhagen Research Paper The Importance of Being Earnest In the play, The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde, there is a lot of humor that can be found. Specifically, developed behind the characters in this play that display many instances of irony and how important it was to fit into the “status quo” of this time period. There are specific behaviors from the characters of Lady Bracknell, Gwendolen, and Algernon that portray Wilde’s opinion of society during

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    appeared to be strict. The Importance of Being Earnest, by Oscar Wilde, a nineteenth century author who was one of the most acclaimed playwrights of his day, is a play set in the Victorian time period that demonstrates how trivial telling the truth was. Different characters throughout Wilde’s play establish their dishonestly through hiding who they really are and pretending to be someone whom they are not. In an essay titled “From ‘Oscar Wilde’s Game of Being Earnest,’” Tirthankar Bose describes

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    make them known. This concept has come to be the brick and mortar of the wry play The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde The significance of the notion of being earnest is contradicted in the play, through Wilde’s clever use of words, characters digression of societal normalcy, and triviality of Victorian concepts. Cynical character Algernon asserts that women of Victorian society reinforce the importance of orderly money as a type of social contract. On page 3, it is quickly established the

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    Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest elevates Charles Baudelaire's concept of the dandy to an embodiment of the aesthetic movement. His aristocratic Algernon Moncrieff is the ideal dandy. He speaks beautifully, dresses beautifully and seeks out the beauty, rather than utility, in life. Wilde cultivates a keen sense for pleasure and style in Algernon for no reason other than their aesthetic value. Algernon himself is committed in remaining as thoroughly useless as possible. Through Algernon

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    Jack is a leading character in Oscar Wilde’s play, “Importance of Being Earnest”, is used as a representation for a set of ideas/attitudes of the upper class. Jack also gives the author, Wilde, the chance to show the Victorian lifestyle. As a member of the upper-class Victorian, Jack has earned respectability only because of his adopted father's fortune.It has put him in a position to know the rules of behavior of polite society. When Lady Bracknell questions his qualifications for marrying her daughter

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