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The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde

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The Importance of Being Earnest
Oscar Wilde’s comedy, The importance of Being Earnest, is a farcical critique of contemporary societal attitudes towards social institutions. The play is centered on the importance of the protagonists being called Earnest without actually being earnest. The Paradoxical structure of the play combines trivial situations with formal language to complicity ridicule traditional standards on issues like marriage and social class. These expectations are deemed meaningful by those who conform to them. The conformists could benefit the most from the irrational nature of the play to lessen the burden their influences has on society. Particularly the absurdity in the portrayal of gender roles and identity in the play demonstrates the hypocrisy of society to create these fixed expectations which the play challenges through imitation and exaggeration.
The dialogue between the characters is rife with satire; however it is most evident through the identity of the different sexes. There is a facade of appearances that ridicules the expression of gender in the play. It works to diminish the idea in society that there is one true gender identity. The male protagonists identify as men, yet they both show feminine qualities. When Jack Algernon would not be a suitable husband, Lady Bracknell objects. She retorts that "Algernon is an extremely, … ostentatiously, eligible young man. He has nothing, but he looks everything" (Act 3). During Act 1, the play

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