"Gwen wilde" Essays and Research Papers

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    Often in poetry the technique of imagery is relied on heavily to present the reader with a visual stimulus that allows the poet to express a set of complex ideas. Poet Gwen Harwood utilises certain everyday images to illustrate the tendency of society to categorize the roles and expectations of females in the 1950’s. Some of her works such as ‘In the Park’‚ ‘Suburban Sonnet’ and ‘Dichterlibre’ draw on images of bickering children‚ household chores and tiresome motherly figures in order for the reader

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    and have more power than women. This was present in the Victorian Era and is still present today. Gender is a social construct. It has been shaped‚ or constructed‚ by society to follow certain stereotypes. In The Importance of Being Earnest‚ Oscar Wilde uses gender role reversal and stereotypes to criticize gender roles in society. In a traditional Victorian Society‚ it is usually the man who controls the life of his wife. During the time period this play was published‚

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    marriage rates are declining and new family structures are becoming more common; however‚ in Victorian England‚ marriage was a strict practice (McCaffrey 3). Because of the stereotypes and practices common in England at the time‚ practices Oscar Wilde did not agree with as a homosexual man‚ there was much to satirize about the Victorian views. According to Jennifer Phegley in the book Courtship and Marriage in Victorian England‚ marriage during the The burning question as it pertains to marriage

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    are many times in which characters on stage are oblivious to the truth that the audience knows. These instances of dramatic irony can have a range of effects from tension to laugh out loud comedy. In his play The Importance of Being Earnest‚ Oscar Wilde uses dramatic irony to create humor by creating problems for characters to solve‚ promoting reactions from characters‚ and tying these problem and reactions into the resolution. In The Importance of Being Earnest the audience is aware of

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    handful of decades‚ never mind a time when women had very little control over when they could leave their home‚ yet in The Importance of Being Earnest‚ such a world exists. Oscar Wilde introduces a world in which women can be dominant figures without negative consequences. In The Importance of Being Earnest‚ Oscar Wilde uses characters who possess inverted stereotypical gender traits and satire to criticize and mock the strict gender

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    Oscar Wilde was an Irish playwright and writer known primarily for his comedies and satires. His play‚ “The Importance of Being Earnest‚” is one of his most famous satires about Victorian society. There are two different types of satire. Horatian satire is lighthearted and mocks human flaws‚ and Juvenalian satire which is bitter and negative and attacks an institution. In this piece Wilde uses Horatian satire to mock the values and morals of the upper-class in Victorian society. The first piece

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    taken.” -Oscar Wilde In society‚ there are many issues to deal with but there are also ways to make life much easier. Individuality has been an ongoing problem because society as a whole distances themselves from people being individuals and rather pushes towards the “cookie cutter” standards. Lack of individuality can be a result of low self-esteem and mistreatment meaning that in order to disguise those flaws one would feel the need to be someone they aren’t. The message Wilde is trying to convey

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    “The Fisherman and His Soul” by Oscar Wilde “The Fisherman and His Soul” is a fairytale written by Oscar Wilde and published in 1888. Written in Biblical dictation it tells a story of a Fisherman who falls in love in a Mermaid‚ but he is given a choice: soul or his love. The Fisherman chooses the latter. As a proper fairytale‚ it joins two worlds together: real and fantasy world and conveys the massage of overpowering and ever-sacrificing love. Oscar Wilde shows the reader that everyone makes

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    The very nature of poetry as being open to interpretive readings means that the poetry of Gwen Harwood can change with time and place‚ thus exploring the social customs and ethics affecting the contemporary audience. Her poems “Father and Child” (FC) and “The Violets” (TV) both reflect her context of the 1960s and 1970s‚ a period in which social activism had a major effect on the values of the presiding culture. The poems reveal Harwood’s characteristic voice that surpasses the barriers of time and

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    they are making particularly nasty snubs‚ but they do not seem to realize that Wilde cleverly plays the joke on them. The receivers of the ‘nasty snubs‚’ actually are sarcastic in turn‚ but the upper class fails to notice it because of their narrow-mindedness. In fact‚ it is the middle class who are portrayed as the characters with the most sense in the play. Through the use of satirical and sarcastic language‚ Wilde reveals the lack of

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