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The Importance Of Being Earnest By Oscar Wilde

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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 and the changing presence of modern thought.
In the first act, Wilde portrays the characters of Algernon, Earnest (who is actually Jack), and the butler Lane to discredit the romantic notion of being married. Using the careless opinions from the butler, Lane and the mention of divorces by Algernon to challenge the changing moral views on marriage. In the phrase “if the lower orders don’t see us a good example, what on earth is the use of them?” (Wilde 1734). Asking the question, why continue to uphold an outdated standard. Later in the play Wilde again contests, traditional values by eluding the notion of choosing a spouse based on financial and social gains instead for romance and love.
Each of the female characters is determined to marry a guy named Earnest. Gwendolen Fairfax with the social gracefulness of the Victorian Era with the help of her mother Lady Bracknell are intensely determined to continue the Victorian lifestyle of social prominence by marring Earnest.

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