Oscar Wilde Importance of Being Earnest Essay

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    The Importance of Being Earnest is a comedic play that was written by Oscar Wilde in the late 1800s. He 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

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    Critic in his review of Oliver Parker’s film adaptation of “The Importance of Being Earnest”. While a bit harsh, Lasalle isn’t completely embellishing his disapproval of the movie. In Oscar Wilde’s original play, the banter between the characters is witty, the scenes are appropriate and the romance is kept to a minimum to focus on the parody and comedy that Wilde intended to show. The film version of the importance of being earnest loses the play’s original comedic and critical allure through its

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    The Importance of Being Earnest is viewed as a standout amongst the best plays composed by Oscar Wilde, an incredible nineteenth century writer. Oscar Wilde manages something one of a kind about his contemporary age in this show. It addresses Victorian social issues, French theater, sham, social dramatization and acting. Every one of these factors influenced the structure of the play in a huge scale. This play is essentially a Victorian mocking dramatization displaying the social, political, monetary

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    During Oscar Wilde’s life, the practices and standards of society heavily conflicted with his personal beliefs and stances. Wilde’s prevalent homoeroticism during a time in which homosexuality was socially unacceptable, served as unassailable evidence in his conviction. Ultimately, the inclusion of such passages resulted in his imprisonment. The necessity to disguise and conceal his homosexuality led to Wilde’s criticism of the need for social facades. He, therefore, used his works, The Picture of

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    The Importance of Being Earnest is a comedy whose playwright was Oscar Wilde and this play was first performed and years later were published in written format. Its first performance was at the St James Theatre, the 14th of February, in 1895 and was released with this subtitle: a trivial comedy for serious people. He released this play when he was in the highest point of his popularity before he fell in disgrace and was imprisoned. The first publication of the written play was in 1898. Oscar Wilde

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    The Importance of Being Earnest is a play written by Oscar Wilde about a man named Jack who lies about his identity and ends up creating huge confusion about who he really is. The biggest notion that appears throughout the play is about character. There are many instances where the characters of the play lie about their identities and pretend to be people they are not. Oscar Wilde does this throughout the play in order to explain how one’s identity can be made up. One is not born with an identity;

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    The Importance of Being Earnest is a comedy of manners in which Oscar Wilde satirizes the way in which 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

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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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    Earnest Hypocrisy In Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest, two gentlemen exemplify the result of dishonesty and hypocrisy. Set in Victorian England, the two bachelors, Algernon and Jack, fight over which one of them will take the name Ernest in order to win their own girl. Wilde circumvents conventionalism and employs superior satirical strategy to not only teach the importance of being earnest, a characteristic held dear by Victorian society, but he also chastises his world for the hypocrisy

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    unobtainable. Every person is a product of the culture they live; they are dictated how to act and their social interactions, pretty much how to live. That being said, it sometimes causes problems between being one true self and conforming to the ideas of society. Characters from Antigone by Sophocles and The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde both have trials and tribulations with societies. Throughout the entire play, Antigone battles with the fact that sometimes you have to make a difficult

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