Oscar Wilde Importance of Being Earnest Essay

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    process of marriage wherein the mere aspect of is absent in some marriages. In 1895, Oscar Wilde, created the play The Importance of Being Earnest. The play highlights a young couple trying to marry, with the suitor going by a false name due to some misunderstandings, however complications arrive when Lady Bracknell, the mother of Gwendolen, one of the spouses-to-be declines her suitor’s proposal. Throughout the play, Wilde causes more instances of chaos and hilarity between the characters, such as his

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    Morality and Foolery In times where earnestness is priority, foolery ensues to escape societal pressure and morality takes a back seat. Oscars Wilde’s play ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’ highlighted this fact with satire. In the Victorian Age of London, outward appearance of seriousness, respect, and societal conformity are of the utmost importance. Citizens of this age were expected to uphold those standards, even above their own happiness and health. With so much pressure to keep up with

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    in various ways appears in Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest. Wilde presents a comedy based on the experiences of two men, Algernon Moncrieff and Jack Worthing, wearing the façade of Ernest instead of their own identity. By living through this name, the two begin living a double life – acquiescing themselves from their lives at home in order to pursue a socially unacceptable lifestyle. By applying queer theory and criticism to The Importance of Being Earnest, the story reads as the struggle

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    In Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest there are multiple types of humor. Oscar Wilde was known for being quite humorous and he shows this throughout the story. This story has grown to be very popular and has been made into countless stage productions and even three films. The Importance of being Earnest can thank its humor and hysterical tone for making it into the widely known and loved play that it is today. One type of humor that is found in The Importance of Being Earnest is inversion

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    The play, The Importance of Being Earnest, written by Oscar Wilde is about two young gentlemen named Jack Worthing and Algernon Moncrieff, who have taken on imaginative alter egos. Jack Worthing pretended to be his younger brother, Ernest, in order to leave his boring life in the country, and to propose to Gwendolyn Fairfax. Algernon Moncrieff also takes on the name, Ernest, in order to meet Jack Worthing’s young and pretty ward, Cecily Cardew. Things begin to take a turn for the worst when Jack

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    Being “earnest” is impossible in Oscar Wilde’s play The Importance of Being Earnest. Earnestness is more often equated with sincerity. Sincerity or earnestness is not only displayed in the title but it is the main theme of Wilde’s work and using satire, the playwright shows the hypocrisy of the morally upstanding, and the inability of the upper and middle class of Victorian England to be earnest. When one thinks of the Victorian English period, the word prudish might come to mind. According to

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    Satire in The Importance of Being Earnest In the play The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde, there are many illustrations of satire. Wilde takes serious situations and makes them rather comical. Having lived in the Victorian times, Wilde takes his experiences with society and satirizes common ideals. In The Importance of Being Earnest, satire is used in a way to mock the principles of the Victorian times. The first situation satirized in the play is birth. When Jack was born his aunt,

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    The Importance of Being Earnest gives the reader an example of what the Victorian upper class was like. Those in the upper class valued wealth, political power, and high social status. Oscar Wilde was able to write about characters in the upper class in a comedic way, which turned into exposing their actual flaws to society. Jack Worthing, the protagonist of the story, was viewed to the outside community as a respectable and serious young man, but he was far from that. He would often pretend and

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    Oscar Wilde once said, “To define is to limit.” If one attempts to define love for the entirety of their life, they would only be looking for one way how love is expressed, not the other shapes and forms that intimacy comes in. In The Importance of Being Earnest, Oscar Wilde uses many forms of figurative language to make fun of social beliefs of that era, which has lessons can be carried into today. This comedic piece of writing takes place in England during the 1890s. Jack Worthing, the protagonist

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    Oscar Wilde’s A Woman of No Importance, written and published in 1893, a witty melodrama that challenges morality, piety, and depicts gender inequalities in the Victorian Era. Critics deemed A Woman of No Importance as being on the, “weakest of the plays Wilde wrote,” 1 of the 19th Century because was described as being very shocking and unpleasant to theatergoers of this time for questioning the gender inequalities of the era. Moreover, this play is characterized as being a sentimental comedy where

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