Oscar Wilde Importance of Being Earnest Essay

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    The play Importance of Being Earnest written by Oscar Wilde is an excellent representative of the comedy of manners. Typical, for Oscar’s style, there is always something hiding behind character than what the readers suppose. In the play women are very responsible for development of the action. I will provide the portrayal of Lady Bracknell, Gwendolen and Miss Prism. A way how Wilde mocks Victorian society and its values and also brings up diverting questions about gender roles, where women are dominant

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    An example of literature that reflects the queer phenomenon publically is presented in Oscar Wilde’s “The Importance of Being Earnest”. Besides the scenes where Algernon is shown eating muffins and cucumbers, to represent his inability to make a decision between men and women, there is an underlying theme of secrets and things that are kept hidden. The concept of bunburying was used as a coping method to deal with the pressure of societal standards. In order to save face and not look bad, lying is

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    Oscar Wilde's final play The Importance of Being Earnest was first performed in 1895, near the end of Britain's Victorian Era. As was common in Wilde's previous works, the play lightheartedly documents (and often mocks) Victorian society and explores a number of universal themes such as marriage, gender, and social class. One element in particular that Wilde repeats throughout the play is the superficiality of his characters. For them, appearance takes precedence over all else. This superficiality

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    people energy and nutrients to essentially grow, move, work, play, think and learn and most importantly, to survive. It is the one thing everyone in this world knows despite its shape, form or smell. In Oscar Wilde’s play, The Importance of Being Earnest, food and eating are constantly being presented. Wilde uses the character’s constant consumption of food to emphasize the overeating, excessive consumption and self-indulgence of the upper-class members of the Victorian society. The necessity of food becomes

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    that uses humour, irony, and/or exaggeration to criticize or show a character’s stupidity or vices. In this case, the literature is a play by Oscar Wilde. The Importance of Being Earnest is a comedic, satirical play that shows ridicule and mockery of the characters through the use of repetitions and parallels to ultimately show the real meaning of being earnest. Wilde’s play is a satirical play because two important characters named Algernon and Jack are living double lives under the same identity

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    “The Importance of Being Earnest,” a satirical play written by Oscar Wilde, discusses a vast variety of criticisms regarding the late Victorian societal period. In this comedic drama, focusing on and analyzing certain minor characters leads to a more effective interpretation of the messages attempting to be portrayed to the audience. For example, through the persona of Lady Bracknell, Wilde effectively mocks the concept of marriage for social status rather than love. Additionally, interpreting the

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    ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’ by Oscar Wilde is a play which contain the lies of Jack and Algernon and how that affects the attitudes of their beloved Gwendolen and Cecily and ‘The Picture of Dorian Gray’ by Oscar Wilde is about the lives of three men Basil, Lord Henry, and Dorian Gray and it also includes how people were hypocritical towards Victorian ethics. In the book ‘The Picture of Dorian Gray’, Lord Henry said, “We are punished for our refusals. Every impulse that we strive to strangle

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    Oscar Wilde’s, The Importance of Being Earnest, is a satirical play for earnest people. Wilde uses witty and humor through analogies or metaphors to address matters such as marriage and class structure. Wild’s play is much of a satirical attack toward the higher class in a Victorian society. The Importance of Being Earnest, acts as a storyline of living a double life. Jack and Algernon claim to be an ideal figure, Ernest, whom which attracts women. Both characters, living the double life, tend to

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    The Importance of Being Earnest, written by a fascinating Oscar Wilde reveals a story of social class and hierarchy during the roaring Victorian time period (1837-1901). Focusing his writing on the social classes, the play becomes comical when he exposes the flaws held by the upper class during this time. Wilde saw earnestness as being a key ideal in Victorian culture for much of British society struck Wilde as dry, stern, conservative, and so “earnestly” concerned with the maintenance of social

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    Sometimes people are not content with themselves, so they need to become someone else to escape. There is always a reason for these kinds of things. Things may get out of hand but could also turn out well. The novel The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde, is based on a man with split personalities and the chaos he deals with. Jack was a country boy who had a lot of responsibilities. He felt trapped, and he had to find a way out. His family knew little about Jack because he was adopted. Jack

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