"Importance of being earnest vs oedipus rex" Essays and Research Papers

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    The theme of sight vs. blindness is a very prevalent theme in Oedipus the King. The two most affected characters by this main theme are Oedipus‚ the king‚ and Tiresias‚ the blind seer. Oedipus is affected because while he is not literally blind‚ he is blinded by ambition to find the killer of Laius‚ and blind to what is happening around him. Tiresias‚ who is actually blind‚ is a prophet and understands what is happening around him. Oedipus does not understand what is happening around him‚ but can

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    According to the Bible‚ “The love of money is the root of all evil.” There is 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

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    Algernon Moncrief in Oscar Wilde’s "The Importance of Being Earnest" is quite simply a child at play. Algy‚ as he’s known to his friends‚ is a young bachelor not yet in his thirties living the aristocratic life of a Victorian gentleman. He has an underdeveloped sense of morality and of the world beyond him. Algy has an excellent skill for wit and as an "Oxonian"‚ his education is also rather noticeable. You might also surmise him to be unhappy if he were eating muffins as if there was no tomorrow

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    more about Miss Prism’s previous situation involving Jack. In the beginning of the act readers know how Cecily and Gwendolen just found out that Algernon and Jack lied to them‚ but readers don’t how betrayed they really feel. With The Importance of Being Earnest being only a play‚ readers only see the characters as they are now without seeing much depth in them. As a play there would be much more suspense‚ and audience members would feel the dramatic and comedic nature of the play more if they watched

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    Chausable claims he “spoke metaphorically‚” which appears to be a continued theme in the play as Chasuble attempts to get himself out of trouble having just embarrassed himself. Usually even though it is normal for men to have attractions towards women‚ being a man of the church‚ he should restrain his thoughts but Wilde mocks him by making him seem like an insult

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    unsuccessfully to change that. Oedipus easily falls into this definition. Oedipus is also a hero that goes through a heroic journey. Therefore‚ Oedipus proves that a tragic hero can exist in the structure of a monomyth. Oedipus is a tragic hero for many reasons. First being his tragic flaw: Hubris. For example‚ while Teiresias‚ Creon‚ and the Choragos all try to reason with Oedipus he continues to be stubborn and ignore everything they tell him. As king‚ Oedipus is greatly fond of his position

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    supposed to study. No one is to blame for Laius’s death‚ not even Oedipus‚ it was fate‚ and fate can’t be avoided. Before reading the play‚ we’re already aware of Oedipus’s story. We know what his ultimate fate is‚ so we know what that all of Oedipus’s actions led up to his ultimate fate. One of the first clues we are given is also one of the biggest clues proving that fate can’t be changed. King Laius didn’t kill Oedipus himself‚ he ordered the shepherd to do it for him. There was no way

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    like? We‚ as humans‚ can only try with our earnest efforts to design our own future. In Oedipus Rex‚ by Sophocles‚ its been predicted by the Apollo at Delphi that Oedipus‚ will kill his father and marry his mother. Many characters‚ such as his parents‚ Laius’ herdsman‚ shepherd of Corinth‚ King Polybus‚ Queen Merope‚ and Creon try to prevent this prophecy from occurring. Even though each of them have their own reasons‚ their efforts ultimately lead to Oedipus’ set destiny. To prevent his inevitable

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    Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest is a comedy that used the figure of the upper class dandy to critique the narrow-mindedness of the middle class in the 1890s. What makes this play so funny is that the upper class is illustrated as silly when they try to mock the earnest middle class. Proud characters who were bred in high society‚ such as Lady Bracknell and her daughter Gwendolen‚ may think that they are making particularly nasty snubs‚ but they do not seem to realize that Wilde cleverly

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    Through Aristotle’s definition of a tragic hero‚ it can be inferred that Oedipus is a tragic hero because of three main reasons: he discove his fate by his own actions‚ he falls from great esteem and his story arises fear and empathy. With all these attributes‚ Oedipus directly fits Aristotle’s definition. Oedipus discovers his fate not by things happening to him but instead by his own actions. Oedipus would have probably never learned that he was Laois’s murderer if he had not called on Teresias

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