of no Importance Oscar Wilde hints in several places through the negative attitude of the characters his feelings about the role of marriage in English upper class. The first opinion we get of Wilde view on marriage is when Miss Worsley and Lady Caroline are having a conversation where Lady Caroline explains to Miss Worsley that the English tradition does not allow unmarried young women should ’conceal their feelings till after they are married.’ This suggests that Wilde is mocking the English
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use of humor to ridicule faults and vices. The Importance of Being Earnest written by Oscar Wilde is a social satire‚ using irony and paradoxes to insinuate the problems and faults found in the Victorian Society. The play is set in the late Victorian Era during a social reform. The class system was defined by the animosity between classes‚ the upper class treating the lower class with disdain and disgust. Wilde satirizes the class system‚ etiquette and disposition that was expected from Victorians.
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Five - Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) The Decay of Lying (1889‚ revised 1891) ’The Happy Prince’‚ ’The Nightingale and the Rose’‚ ’The Selfish Giant’‚ ’The Remarkable Rocket’ and ’The Devoted Friend’ from The Happy Prince and Other Tales (1888) My immediate response to these works by Oscar Wilde is that they are charmingly light-hearted‚ evocative‚ challenging in content and meaning‚ and that the Fairy stories‚ in particular‚ are a delight to read. With his fairy stories‚ Oscar Wilde has fused a traditional
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learn what is of use…and what must be avoided” which is true of the play The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde. However Wilde parallels these aspects of everyday life and transgresses them for comic value. Wilde uses Lady Bracknell as a tool for inversion when transgressing the social image of women. Lady Bracknell is not a typical Victorian woman; from her first introduction Wilde skilfully engenders an image of a domineering and haughty woman designed for the amusement of the audience; being
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More than any other character in the play‚ Jack Worthing represents conventional Victorian values: he wants others to think he adheres to such notions as duty‚ honor‚ and respectability‚ but he hypocritically flaunts those very notions. Indeed‚ what Wilde was actually satirizing through Jack was the general tolerance for hypocrisy in conventional Victorian morality. Jack uses his alter-ego Ernest to keep his honorable image intact. Ernest enables Jack to escape the boundaries of his real life and act
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The Picture of Dorian Gray: Corruption Through Aestheticism The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde is the story of moral corruption by the means of aestheticism. In the novel‚ the well meaning artist Basil Hallward presets young Dorian Gray with a portrait of himself. After conversing with cynical Lord Henry Wotton‚ Dorian makes a wish which dreadfully affects his life forever. "If it were I who was to be always young‚ and the picture that was to grow old! For that I would give everything
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Oscar Wilde‚ an Irish poet from the Victorian era and very famous representative of Aestheticism‚ composed various fictions‚ plays and a lot of poetry. This short discourse deals with his “Sonnet on hearing the Dies Irae Sung in the Sistine Chapel.” The sonnet is a typical Italian or Petrarchan style sonnet divided into an octave (two quatrains) and a sestet (two tercets). The rhyming pattern is very regular as well. The octave rhymes a-b-b-a‚ a-c-c-a and the sestet rhymes d-e-f‚ d-e-f. Also‚ considering
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The Importance of Being Earnest The Importance of Being Earnest a play written by Oscar Wilde is set in England in the late Victorian era. Wilde uses obvious situational and dramatic irony within the play to satirize his time period. According to Roger Sale in “Being Ernest” the title has a double meaning to it and is certainly another example of satire used by Wilde. With a comedic approach‚ Wilde ridicules the absurdities of the character’s courtship rituals‚ their false faces‚ and their secrets
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AFFINITY. Oscar Wilde was a prominent playwright of the Victorian era‚ and a personality to say the least. His biting humour and keen wit produced many popular plays and quotes of the time‚ and are still well known today. A satire is a play engaging the use of humor‚ irony‚ exaggeration‚ or ridicule to expose and criticize people’s stupidity or vices. ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’ is one of his better-known satires‚ effectively ridiculing many of the Victorian values that were of the greatest
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IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST‚ A TRIVIAL COMEDY FOR SERIOUS PEOPLE by the Irish writer and poet Oscar Wilde‚ is a comedy about the customs and seriousness of society around Victorian values of that time. THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST is an excellent example of what a satire is‚ by the use of satirical devices such as irony‚ sarcasm and farce to show the society in a ridiculous way. In the play‚ Wilde often satirizes the Victorian society and all the rules that weren’t followed‚ criticizing the thinking
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