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The Importance Of Being Earnest By Oscar Wilde

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Wyndham Lewis recognizes, “Wherever there is objective truth, there is satire.” Most readers don't recognize this until they feel insulted, mostly due to the fact that humans don’t acknowledge their lifestyle flaws until others 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 type of …show more content…

I call that business,”(Wilde, 15). As for Lady Bracknell, she becomes a contradiction claiming, “...when I was married to Lord Bracknell I had no fortune of any kind,” (Wilde, 64), yet she proposes an immense inquisition towards Jack regarding her wanting Gwendolen to marry rich. Wilde’s diverse usage of character's moralities in the play allots for the depiction of Victorian conversation, behavior, and responsibility. Oscar Wilde’s masterful use of allusion, the neologism of the word “Bunbury” and the mockery of Victorian society establish the theme of duality embedded throughout the play, The Importance of Being Ernest. Newhouse 3 Wilde presents a very resourceful platform for public criticism and debate through the clever use of is characters’ personalities and opinions. Friends Jack and Algernon represent a second then triviality through their acts and notions of a desire to be christened in the name of Ernest to gain the affections of two likewise paradoxical women; Gwendolyn and Cecily. On page 40, Jack asserts, “I would like to be christened myself…” before obviously claiming that he has no recollection any previous christening like that of every other infant at the time (Wilde, 40). Later on page 47, Algernon enquires about ten very same rectors and expresses his urgency to be christened the same name of this Ernest (Wilde, 47). The hand-in-hand involvement names and christening an excessive need to display one’s 'public’ nature as good, honest men, which,

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