The Importance of Being Earnest

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    pted of a character he is when he starts teaching Gerald on the craftiness of women , he even starts hinting that being with women outside of marriage has more joy and fulfillment than being married and tied down to one woman by marriage , and Gerald the naive character he is , he seemed to be soaking up everything that Lord illingworth is saying , then in a heart to heart talk with her son , Mr’s Arbuthnot tells Gerald the story of herself and Lord illingworth but without revealing that it was…

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    Oscar Wilde, the author of a very successful play, “The Importance of Being Earnest”, set the play in the 19th century, or the Victorian Era. Wilde’s purpose was to make a mockery of Victorian ideas, especially the idea of being earnest. Each of the four main characters are shown to be part of a Victorian society that Wilde is satirising. Jack invented a false individual known as Ernest. He is shown to be a liar while living an earnest life, which makes him a hypocrite. Thus, Jack is a…

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    play The Importance of Being Earnest, the female characters Cecily and Gwendolyn conform to the stereotypical role of the Victorian women's dream of marriage. They both have fantasies of what a perfect husband should be. Cecily and Gwendolyn will not marry unless the man's name is Earnest. Gwendolen tells Jack that “...my ideal has always been to love someone of the name of Earnest” (262). Cecily and Gwendolyn are fixated on the name Earnest because they believe that a man named Earnest will be…

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    Importance of getting this goddamn essay done on time Comedy is universally recognizable, and comes in a variety of different forms and BLANK. From the vintage screwball comedy of the Marx Brothers, to the slapstick humor of rivals Tom and Jerry, to the self-deprecating and dark stand up of comedian Louis C.K. there is something out there for everyone. One of the most famous comedy’s is a satirical comment on Victorian society, featuring quick wit, sly comments, and exaggerated absurdity.…

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    changes his identity to Earnest to perform the things that he wants to experience. For Jack, being a guardian and a landowner is a great obligation for his ward and people. Through his alter-ego, Jack obtains freedom because he becomes the opposite of his real self—the liberated and careless individual that he could not demonstrate in reality. Aside from Jack, Gwendolyn also escapes from her real world, through her…

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    Due to their categorizations as a social tragedy and a comedy of manners, respectively, A Doll’s House and The Importance of Being Earnest are immediately identified with many differences. However, as a result of the plays’ intertwining themes that suggest the journey to contentment through the determination of a person to appease to pressures given by society will ultimately lead to that person’s downfall according to societal standards, a common ground is found. Ironically, it is the…

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    Keeping up with a lie can lead to a horrible snowball effect that worsens situations and in the play The Importance of Being Earnest there is a collection of lies that people have and worsen to create its ideal plot of deceiving and mystery. Character Jack from the play is a man with many secrets and lies that he worsens and grows throughout the play. This why he is the perfect character that sets out the model of Oscar Wilde's theme in the play that lies only grow to become worse until revealed…

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    pleasure. This paper would focus on the witticism in Oscar Wilde’s play, The Importance of Being Earnest, which exposes the dualities of identities in a society where the social relationships are rooted on false notions of deception. The play is a parody on the…

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    He is stuck between duty and pleasure. Being respectful is extremely boring to Jack, so he created his younger brother, Ernest. With Ernest, he has a means of escaping the drab life of a legal guardian into the more interesting world of a social London: “Algernon: Yes; but this isn 't your cigarette…

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    Gender Identity in The Importance of Being Earnest In Victorian England, people’s identity controlled every aspect of their life. Their social class, religion, wealth, and gender all formed their identity, and dictated what they could and could not do, and how they could live. Acting outside of these identity-based restrictions was not often done, and when it was, was often considered inappropriate behaviour. These rules were especially ridged regarding gender, and firmly dictated how each…

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