Victorian values

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    General Introduction The Victorian society is viewed as the most conservative because of its dependence on morals and values. Women suffer from the oppression and the inequality between genders and classes in such cruel society, this last did not give them any right, they cannot work, vote or even inherit, even their freedom is limited for remaining constantly pure and innocent and preserve them from being fallen. The prostitution or better known in the Victorian society as “The great social evil”

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    of Victorian Society, and focuses on Mr. Utterson, a respected, principled lawyer. Utterson receives the will of Dr. Jekyll, who is by far considered the most civilized in London, discovering Mr. Hyde is proclaimed to be his heir. Mr. Hyde is described as a foul, barbaric creature, known for the trampling of a young girl. Bewildered by this, Utterson makes an initiative to investigate the reasoning behind the doctor’s choice. Stevenson utilizes the story to express the attributes of Victorian Society

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    the people of the Victorian Era act. The play itself follows Algernon Moncrieff and Jack Worthing, and their quest to get acquainted with their future fiancées, Cecily Cardew and Gwendolen Fairfax. Additionally, Wilde wrote the play during the aestheticism movement, which promoted the creation of art for art’s sake. Through the use of humor, irony, and sarcasm, Wilde highlights the artificiality of Victorian society. From this, two major themes arise: people from the Victorian Era place significance

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    Jane Eyre, a powerful Victorian-era novel, Charlotte Bronte portrays the role of women in Victorian society while masterfully solidifying Jane’s role as its polar opposite: an independent woman. The events surrounding the mystery of Thornfield Hall and specific passages in the novel emphasize this theme. Being independent was atypical of women in the Victorian era, but this is an attribute that Jane possesses. She is independent, unlike most women living in the Victorian era. She had opinions of

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    In the satirical play “The Importance of Being Earnest,” the playwright, Oscar Wilde mocks the ideas that Victorian society had about marriage. The scene in which Jack, one of the main characters, attempts to persuade Lady Bracknell to allow him to marry Gwendolen, her daughter, is over dramatic and humorous in order to show how the Victorian society treated marriages. Oscar Wilde subtlety argues, through comedy, that most marriages are for financial and social gain instead of love, emotions, and

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    Gender Roles in Dracula

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    Stoker wrote his novel, Dracula. The Victorian culture often suppressed women and their value. Traditional Victorian women were thought of to be pure and virginal. Bram Stoker revealed another side of women that was not often seen. These qualities were like that of the emerging new feministic culture called the “New Woman”. The concept of gender roles in the 1890’s was very conflicted; Dracula challenged traditional gender roles. Typical gender roles in the Victorian era were that of a woman being kind

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    Earnest exhibits a “high seriousness of intent” that Wilde wished for.        In the play “The Importance of Being Earnest”, Oscar Wilde focused on the Victorian Age by mocking the Victorian principles and ideals. Wilde utilized satire and mockery through the character to make fun of their culture, principles, behaviors, and morals of the Victorians. Wilde also used the characters in the play to demonstrate the political, social, and religious views in the late 1900’s.        One of the first things

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    unreliably explanation on the dramatic farce genre for Wilde. This play is a comedy of manner during the Victorian Age. The Victorian Age was a period of peace and sensibility. The Importance of Being Earnest was an early trial in Victorian melodrama. This play was particularly known as a satire with a touch of sentimental comedy. This play was known for its worldly deliberately farce. The Victorian society dealt with

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    The Victorian era was a period of great change in England in terms of social, political, and even scientific advancement. The country became highly regarded around the world, whereby London was the center of excellence and was characterized by its citizen’s high moral standards. The pressure on Englishmen to maintain a respectable persona among others was so tremendous that often reputations were damaged at the slightest deviation from social norms. Similarly to the façade of England’s perfection

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    believed that people in the Victorian Era took life too seriously. He wrote this play with various forms of satire to ridicule the strict lifestyle the upper-class were boxed into. The upper class had pretentious values and behaviors that characterized Victorian life. During the Victorian Era, people were living under Queen Victoria’s monarch. During her reign, “Queen Victoria, conveyed connotations of "prudish, "repressed," and "old fashioned" (Roth). Wilde used the Victorian ideals to ridicule the

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