One of Lady Bracknell’s most out-standing quotes in The Importance of Being Earnest is "Ignorance is like a delicate‚ exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone." The metaphor she uses essentially explains that ignorance is bliss. In fact‚ in the play Lady Bracknell asks “Do you know everything or do you know nothing?” What Lady Bracknell is saying in both quotes is that knowing everything gives an individual what is described as ‘that wonderful ignorance’. As long as one believes what is told
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hypocrisy of Bracknells Lady Bracknell is a well-known and classic character from The Importance of Being Earnest‚ one the most prestigious plays of Oscar Wilde. In the play‚ she symbolises the British aristocracy during the Victorian Era‚ who is ridiculed and satirized by Wilde. However‚ another portrait of Lady Bracknell was created by Oliver Parker‚ a famous director who directed the remakes of the original play by Wilde‚ and played by Dame Judi Dench. The two versions of Lady Bracknell are basically
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Being Earnest. Through Lady Bracknell‚ a prestigious member of the upper class in The Importance of Being Earnest‚ Wilde displays his views on the morals and values of the Victorian society. Lady Bracknell is the epitome of the hypocritical‚ greedy‚ and insincere wealthy population in England from the time of 1832-1901. Oscar Wilde demonstrates these characteristics in instances such as Lady Bracknell’s reasoning for refusing the marriage of her daughter‚ Gwendolen‚ to Jack. Lady Bracknell’s attitude
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Wilde also critiqued the gender roles of the time period. His character‚ Lady Bracknell‚ has been played on many occasion by male actors because of her strong and brash behaviors. She is seen as an immovable obstacle for Jack to overcome. Jack at one point describes her as‚ “Never met such a Gorgon… In any case‚ she is a monster‚ without being a myth‚”(Wilde Earnest 1). The Lady is a monster‚ a repulsive creature. She is not the prim‚ delicate woman of Victorian England. During this time period
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Lady Augusta Bracknell In The Importance of Being Ernest The most memorable character and one who has a tremendous impact on the audience is Lady Augusta Bracknell. Wilde’s audience would have identified most with her titled position and bearing. Wilde humorously makes her the tool of the conflict‚ and much of the satire. She serves well the plot and the theme of the play. She is the strong hand who forces the whole play to move forward with a happy ending. . Generally‚ Lady Bracknell is first
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In comparing the views on society’s classes‚ in the novel The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde‚ there is a connection to the classes in society in London England during the Victorian era. In the novel the character Lady Bracknell makes a comment about the classes‚ which included some fascinating points‚ such as; the meanings and origins of the aristocracy‚ the meanings and origins of the purple commerce and how those two interacted in London during the Victorian era. To start off‚ the
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to the all the relationships that end in the this story. In this Act‚ Lady Bracknell’s monologue reacting to Cecily was very interesting‚ because Jack remains her guardian until she is the age of thirty-five. He often has the last say so with everything that Cecily does. Also Lady Bracknell said that Cecily need a more sophisticated hair style such as a French maid because of an event that occurred with her friend. Lady Bracknell mocked the Victorian society by the status that she holds and how she
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fine line between loving the money or character of a person. The root of all evil starts when one doesn’t notice the difference. Lady Bracknell‚ an antagonist in The Importance of being Earnest‚ is a powerful‚ pompous and pontifical person who values money more than love and comprehends marriage like business deals in terms of allusions‚ connections and irony. Lady Bracknell’s character is revealed by allusions throughout the play. One can tell that she is very powerful and pompous from few examples
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Explore the dramatic significance of Lady Bracknell in Act 1 Throughout Act 1‚ Oscar Wilde uses the character of Lady Bracknell as a highly comedic character who causes the entire play to come together by unknowingly creating a calamitous chain of events to occur by her refusal to let her daughter Gwendolyn marry to Jack Worthing. She is presented as strict‚ uptight woman who is very much the Matriarch of the family. One way Wilde presents this idea is when Lady Bracknell is interviewing Jack on whether
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Characterisation: Abigail Williams The Crucible is a play written by Arthur Miller‚ and is set in the fiercely Puritan Salem‚ Massachusetts in 1692. Abigail Williams‚ above all else‚ is the least complex. As the antagonist of the play‚ she’s dominant and clearly puts herself out there as the opposition. Abigail is 17-year-old niece of Reverend Parris. She is unmarried‚ and an orphan‚ meaning her position on the social ladder is fairly low. Abigail Williams is a young lady with a vicious
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