Oscar Wilde Importance of Being Earnest Essay

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    The huge issue that ‘The importance of being earnest’ raises is whether marriage was based on love or whether it was to just used to achieve a higher social status. Wilde portrays the different views on marriage through the characters of the play. Whilst Algernon is rather negative about marriage and doesn’t see it as anything more than a business deal, the character Gwendolyn seems to respect the values of marriage. Wilde keeps on ridiculing the social traditions and disposition of the noble class

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    One of the most famous quotes from Oscar Wilde’s play, The Importance of Being Earnest is in the final act where Gwendolen and Cecily are discussing what they should do with Jack and Algernon. She claims that, “in matter of grave importance, style, not sincerity is the vital thing” (III, 19). This is the epitome of the story because it truly encompasses Wilde’s thoughts on Victorian life and society. Throughout the play, there are numerous instances where you can see that majority, if not all

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    not be proven. Ten years later acclaimed author of Dorian Gray and The Importance of Being Earnest Oscar Wilde, was convicted on twelve counts of sodomy (history.com, 2017). At this time homosexuality was still seen as a serious criminal offence and social taboo in Britain. Wilde was incarcerated for two years moving from prison to prison carrying out hard labour, walking many hours on a treadmill. After serving his sentence Wilde was exiled to France where he later died from meningitis. With the enactment

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    Wilde’s ‘The Importance Of Being Earnest’ explores various themes of love and marriage, especially in Act 1, where marriage in Victorian society is widely contradicted as a ‘very pleasant state,’ instead using various comedic devises, such as puns, double entendres and inversions to mock its virtue and morality. Wilde creates comedy through the presentation of Victorian views on the functionality of marriage, ridiculing it as a social tool. The fact that Victorian society does not value the ‘love’

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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

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    On the eleventh of November, I was able to take in a performance of Oscar Wilde’s 1895 comedy, The Importance of Being Earnest, a Trivial Comedy for Serious People, it was performed in an amphitheater from within Corning Community College. Additionally, it was presented by the aforementioned college, and the Muse of Fire Theatre group. While initially off putting, the overall experience was generally an enjoyable one. When viewing the stage the audience can obviously tell that, while seemingly simplistic

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    In Oscar Wilde’s play, The Importance of Being Earnest, many aspects of Victorian society and modern life are satirized. Marriage is a central aspect of American life- a dream for some and a nightmare for others. Marriage also plays a principal role in The Importance of Being Earnest- the dream for the young couples, Algernon and Cecily as well as Jack and Gwendolen, but their dream is the plague of Aunt Augusta, also known as Lady Bracknell. Oscar Wilde uses witty dialogue to ridicule traditional

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    individual’s future. In Victorian England, class diversity and class placement either hindered or enhanced people’s lives. One work of literature that comments on class distinctions in Victorian England is “The Importance of Being Earnest”, by Oscar Wilde. In “The Importance of Being Earnest”, Wilde expresses the concern with the Victorian people endeavoring to maintain an upper class reputation--while hiding the reality of their lives. The Victorian class system had an influential role on peoples lives

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    public life, as well as a completely opposite or just a different private life. In The Importance of Being Earnest, Oscar Wilde explains and criticises the duality that existed in this time period. In a similar manner, teenagers, celebrities, superheroes, and even regular people all still use the idea of double identity to hide their true personality behind technology. Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest is a play that expounds how the characters empower the concept of double identity so

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    The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde The Importance of Being Earnest appears to be a conventional 19th century farce. False identities, prohibited engagements, domineering mothers, lost children are typical of almost every farce. However, this is only on the surface in Wilde's play. His parody works at two levels- on the one hand he ridicules the manners of the high society and on the other he satirises the human condition in general. The characters in The Importance of Being Earnest

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