Attendants, ca. 547, both illustrate powerful individuals from the time periods. While both artworks are about powerful leaders they have a wide stretch of time between them. The mosaic of Theodora and Her Attendants is a part of the Byzantine art era. Byzantine art was art produced in the middle ages, and usually centered in Constantinople. The artwork from this time were very connected with early Christianity in that most of the artwork and architecture were a part of a church, much like…
Author of The Importance of being Earnest, Oscar Wilde, utilizes dialogue, diction and irony to illustrate the play’s protagonist, Jack Worthing, who in turn illuminates the script’s theme that behavior deemed appropriate by society may conflict with moral decency. The dialogue from the interrogation of Jack by Lady Bracknell, his love’s mother, reveals that he is a character of high class and puts up a front in order to make a good impression in the face of others, as after the meeting, he…
Ladies and Porn” aims to explore the sexualised commodity culture of the Victorian period by providing an alternative reading of Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Having stated the novel has a “quasi-pornographic” quality , Pikula comments on the way Stoker exploits sex to draw significance to the hyper-sexual fin-de-siècle practices such as consumption, materialistic production and the rise of the ‘modern’ women in regards to late Victorian advertising. Looking in particular at the introduction of ‘The…
(Who is to Blame for the Death of Paul in The Rocking-Horse Winner?) In the first half of the 1900’s, Great Britain had a very specified and tight knit upper class. Those who were not upper class tried desperately to imitate those who were, in order to fit in and feel important. It was a priority for the members of the upper class to live in the right place, have the right friends, own the right things, and send their children to the right schools. Many people could not afford these luxuries,…
From 1811 to 1820, George IV ruled over a time in Europe known as the Regency Era. Many historians believe this era to be a time of elegance, romance, and follies. The most important concept to appear in this era was etiquette. Etiquette was a necessity for men and women to thrive throughout their communities. It's how people earned the respect of peers and exhibited class. During the Regency Era, a woman named Jane Austen published Pride and Prejudice which became an instant success. In this…
Preforming an altered identity from your own, especially that of someone who is a lesser class, is a risk to destabilizes the notion of that identity, but only based on the reason for those actions. Within the Victoria Era the class system was rigid list; if you were born within a certain class, you stayed within that class your whole life and therefore, there was an identity that distinguish the people within those classes. Thus, features of the identity of the classes become repetitive, which…
In Oscar Wildes comedic play, The Importance of Being Earnest, the secrets kept and maintained by Jack Worthing, his friend Algernon Moncrieff and his abandoner Miss Prism completely influence the plot. In the play we are opened to multiple different types of characters. Many of these characters are put into situations which reveals to the audience the true meaning of the play. Often in a play, the characters success usually comes with some secret keeping from other characters. In The Importance…
Within the writings of Charles Dickens, the author brought to life the plight of children and the poor in England during the Industrial Revolution. Unmentioned in our textbook, Dickens revealed to the public the atrocious working conditions which were prevalent in the workhouses that drove the economy in what was the most technologically advanced society in the world. In this essay, three books will be used as examples of Dickens' experiences that he would draw upon to create his…
Oscar Wilde ridicules Victorian aristocracy’s gluttony and self-indulgence by using hunger as a euphemism for desire. Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest stands as a parody of society, morals, and marriage during Queen Victoria’s reign. Conflict arises in the scenes of the play that feature food, such as: the stolen bottle of wine, Algernon devouring sandwiches meant for his aunt, Jack and Gwendolen’s bread and butter, and the muffins. Algernon bewilders Jack by eating muffins during a time…
http://www.jstor.org.ezproxy.liberty.edu:2048/stable/25679230?seq=3 Greenblatt, S. (2013). The Norton Anthology of English Literature, the major authors (9th ed.). New York: W.W. Norton & Co. Schwarzbach, F. S. (1985). The Lady of Shalott in the Victorian Novel (review). The Henry James Review 7(1), 51-52. The Johns Hopkins University Press. Udall, S. (1990). Between Dream and Shadow: William Holman Hunt's "Lady of Shalott". Woman's Art Journal, 11(1), 34-38. Retrieved from…