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The Importance of Being Earnest, by Oscar Wilde

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The play, The Importance of Being Earnest, by Oscar Wilde was written in the Victorian Age of England. During this time morality was connected with sexual restraint and strict codes of conduct in public. This play hilariously critiques Victorian moral and social values while the characters in the play try to figure out the meaning of “earnestness”. Wilde uses humor and irony to publicly ridicule the self-aggrandizing attitude of the Victorian upper classes, as well as to expose their duplicity and hypocrisy in regards to their social behaviors. The characters in the play are the primary source of the humor and irony. In Otto Reinert’s “Satiric Strategy in the Importance of Being Earnest” he points out that, “Wilde's basic formula for satire is their (the characters) assumption of a code of behavior that represents the reality that Victorian convention pretends to ignore” (Reinert 15). The main character, Jack Worthing, is a prime example of this. To function in society he creates an alter-ego named Ernest. This way, he can be “Ernest in town and Jack in the country” (Wilde 1737). Jack represents his conventional Victorian side – he has responsibility as a guardian in the country, where it is his “duty” to “adopt a very high moral tone on all subjects” (Wilde 1738). Ernest, however, enables Jack to throw away his real life troubles and act carelessly, something he could never do as Jack. The dual nature of his character satirizes the hypocrisy in conventional Victorian

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