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Oscar Wilde
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- Themes in The Importance of Being Earnest
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- About The Importance of Being Earnest
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- Summary and Analysis
- Act I: Part 1
- Act I: Part 2
- Act II: Part 1
- Act II: Part 2
- Character Analysis
- John (Jack) Worthing
- Algernon (Algy) Moncrieff
- Lady Augusta Bracknell
- Gwendolen Fairfax & Cecily Cardew
- Rev. Chasuble & Miss Prism
- Character Map
- Oscar Wilde Biography
- Critical Essays
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Critical Essays Themes in The Importance of Being Earnest
Duty and Respectability
The aristocratic Victorians valued duty and respectability above all else. Earnestness — a determined and serious desire to do the correct thing — was at the top of the code of conduct. Appearance was everything, and style was much more important than substance. So, while a person could lead a secret life, carry on affairs within marriage or have children outside of wedlock, society would look the other way as long as the appearance of propriety was maintained. For this reason, Wilde questions whether the more important or serious issues of the day are overlooked in favor of trivial concerns about appearance. Gwendolen is the paragon of this value. Her marriage proposal must be performed correctly, and her brother even practices correct proposals. Gwendolen's aristocratic attitude is "In matters of grave importance, style, not sincerity is the vital thing." The trivial is important; the serious is overlooked.
The tea ceremony in Act II is a hilarious example of Wilde's contention that manners and appearance are everything. The guise of correctness is the framework for war. Both women, thinking they are engaged to the same person, wage a civilized "war" over the tea service while the servants silently watch. When Gwendolen requests no sugar, Cecily adds four lumps to her cup. Although she asks for bread and butter, Gwendolen is given a large slice of cake. Her true feelings come out only in an aside that Cecily supposedly cannot hear: "Detestable girl!" Gwendolen is also appalled to find that Cecily is living in Jack's country home, and she inquires about a chaperone. Wilde gives examples again and again of the aristocrat's concern for propriety, that everything is done properly no matter what those good manners might be camouflaging.
The Absence of Compassion
Two areas in which the Victorians showed little sympathy or compassion were illness and death. When Lady Bracknell hears that Bunbury died after his doctors told him he could not live, she feels he has — in dying — acted appropriately because he had the correct medical advice. "Illness of any kind is hardly a thing to be encouraged in others. Health is the primary duty of life." Lady Bracknell, like other aristocrats, is too busy worrying about her own life, the advantages of her daughter's marriage, and her nephew's errors in judgment to feel any compassion for others. Gwendolen, learning from her mother, is totally self-absorbed and definite about what she wants. She tells Cecily, "I never travel without my diary. One should have something sensational to read in the train." Wilde seems to be taking to task a social class that thinks only of itself, showing little compassion or sympathy for the trials of those less fortunate.
Another serious subject — religion — is also a topic of satire. While concerns of the next world would be an appropriate topic for people of this world, it seems to be shoved aside in the Victorian era. Canon Chasuble is the symbol of religious thought, and Wilde uses him to show how little the Victorians concerned themselves with attitudes reflecting religious faith. Chasuble can rechristen, marry, bury, and encourage at a moment's notice with interchangeable sermons filled with meaningless platitudes. Even Lady Bracknell mentions that christenings are a waste of time and, especially, money. Chasuble's pious exterior betrays a racing pulse for Miss Prism: "Were I fortunate enough to be Miss Prism's pupil, I would hang upon her lips." Quickly correcting his error, the minister hides his hardly holy desires in the language of metaphor. Wilde's satire here is gentle and humorous, chiding a society for its self-importance.
Popular Culture
The popular attitudes of the day about the French, literary criticism, and books are also subjects of Wilde's humor. Wilde wittily asserts that Victorians believe that nothing good comes from France, except for (in Wilde's mind) the occasional lesbian maid. Otherwise, France is a good place to kill off and request the burial of Ernest. As the good reverend says, "I fear that hardly points to any very serious state of mind at the last." Literary criticism is for "people who haven't been at a University. They do it so well in the daily papers." Modern books are filled with truths that are never pure or simple, and scandalous books should be read but definitely in secret. Again Wilde criticizes the Victorians for believing that appearance is much more important than truth. He takes the opportunity to insert many examples of popular thought, revealing bias, social bigotry, thoughtlessness and blind assumptions.
Secret Lives
Because Victorian norms were so repressive and suffocating, Wilde creates episodes in which his characters live secret lives or create false impressions to express who they really are. Jack and Algernon both create personas to be free. These other lives allow them to neglect their duties — in Algernon's case — or to leave their duties and pursue pleasure — in Jack's case. Very early in Act I, Wilde sets up these secret lives, and they follow through until the final act. When Jack and Algernon realize their marriages will end their pursuit of pleasure, they both admit rather earnestly, "You won't be able to run down to the country quite so often as you used to do, dear Algy," and "You won't be able to disappear to London quite so frequently as your wicked custom was." Marriage means the end of freedom, pleasure, wickedness, and the beginning of duty and doing what is expected. Of course, Jack and Algernon could continue to don their masks after they marry Gwendolen and Cecily, but they will have to be cautious and make sure society is looking the other way.
Passion and Morality
Wilde's contention that a whole world exists separate from Victorian manners and appearances is demonstrated in the girlish musings of Cecily. When she hears that Jack's "wicked" brother Ernest is around, she is intensely desirous of meeting him. She says to Algernon, "I hope you have not been leading a double life, pretending to be wicked and being really good all the time." The thought of meeting someone who lives outside the bounds of prudery and rules is exciting to naïve Cecily. Even using the name Ernest for his secret life is ironic because Algernon is not being dutiful — earnest — in living a secret life.
Various characters in the play allude to passion, sex and moral looseness. Chasuble and Prism's flirting and coded conversations about things sexual, Algernon stuffing his face to satisfy his hungers, the diaries (which are the acceptable venues for passion), and Miss Prism's three-volume novel are all examples of an inner life covered up by suffocating rules. Even Algernon's aesthetic life of posing as the dandy, dressing with studied care, neglecting his bills, being unemployed, and pursuing pleasure instead of duty is an example of Victorians valuing trivialities. Once Algernon marries he will have suffocating rules and appearances to keep up. Wilde's characters allude to another life beneath the surface of Victorian correctness. Much of the humor in this play draws a fine line between the outer life of appearances and the inner life of rebellion against the social code that says life must be lived earnestly.
Courtship and Marriage
Oscar Wilde felt these Victorian values were perpetuated through courtship and marriage, both of which had their own rules and rituals. Marriage was a careful selection process. When Algernon explains that he plans to become engaged to Jack's ward, Cecily, Lady Bracknell decides, "I think some preliminary enquiry on my part would not be out of place." When Lady Bracknell pummels Jack with questions about parents, politics, fortune, addresses, expectations, family solicitors, and legal encumbrances, his answers must be proper and appropriate for a legal union between the two families to be approved. Fortune is especially important, and when Jack and Cecily's fortunes are both appropriate, the next problem is family background. Because Jack does not know his parents, Lady Bracknell suggests he find a parent — any with the right lineage will do — and find one quickly. Appearance, once again, is everything. Duty (not joy, love or passion) is important, further substantiating Algy's contention that marriage is a loveless duty: "A man who marries without knowing Bunbury [an excuse for pleasure] has a very tedious time of it." Marriage is presented as a legal contract between consenting families of similar fortunes; background, love, and happiness have little to do with it.
Perpetuating the Upper Class
The strict Victorian class system, in which members of the same class marry each other, perpetuates the gulf between the upper, middle and lower classes. Snobbish, aristocratic attitudes further preserve the distance between these groups. Jack explains to Lady Bracknell that he has no politics. He considers himself a Liberal Unionist. Lady Bracknell finds his answer satisfactory because it means that he is a Tory, or a conservative. Jack's home in London is on the "unfashionable side" of Belgrave Square, so "that could easily be altered." When Jack inquires whether she means the "unfashionable" or the side of the street, Lady Bracknell explains, "Both, if necessary." The French Revolution is held up as an example of what happens when the lower class is taught to question its betters. Education is not for learning to think; it is for mindlessly following convention. Lady Bracknell approves of ignorance. In fact, she explains, "The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square." Thinking causes discontent, and discontent leads to social revolution. That simply will not do.
Class Conflict
One might think aristocrats would see the error of their ways and try to be more virtuous in a moral sense. However, they see their attitudes as the virtuous high ground and believe that other classes should conform to aristocratic attitudes and see the error of their own ways. When Miss Prism seems to chide the lower classes for producing so many children for Chasuble to christen, she appears to see it as a question of thrift. "I have often spoken to the poorer classes on the subject [of christenings]. But they don't seem to know what thrift is." Chasuble speaks humorously of the penchant of the aristocracy to dabble in good causes that do not disrupt their own lives too much. He mentions a sermon he gave for the Society for the Prevention of Discontent Among the Upper Orders. To the Victorians, reform means keeping the current social and economic system in place by perpetuating upper-class virtues and economy.
Every page, every line of dialogue, every character, each symbol, and every stage direction in The Importance of Being Earnest is bent on supporting Wilde's contention that social change happens as a matter of thoughtfulness. Art can bring about such thoughtfulness. If the eccentric or unusual is to be replaced with correct behavior and thought, human sympathy and compassion suffer. If strict moral values leave no room for question, a society loses much of what is known as humanity.
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The Importance of Being Earnest
Oscar wilde, everything you need for every book you read..

The Art of Deception: Fact v. Fiction
As a leader of the Aesthetic movement, Wilde was especially interested in the relationship between life and art, pondering the eternal question, “Does art imitate life, or life imitate art?” Wilde explores this relationship in The Importance of Being Earnest through the conflict that arises when fact collides with fiction. The conflict between fact and fiction is driven by Algernon and Jack’s lies about their respective identities, specifically the fictional personas they create in order…

The Pursuit of Marriage
The pursuit of marriage is a driving force behind much of the play’s action. Similar to many Victorian novels of the period, the play reads as a marriage plot, documenting the errors in social etiquette and romantic upheavals that come about as Jack and Algernon stumble towards the altar. Jack pursues Gwendolen’s hand, while Algernon pursues Cecily . Because Jack and Algernon are willing to go to such outlandish lengths to appease Gwendolen and Cecily’s…

Cash, Class, and Character
The Victorian society in which Wilde lived was concerned with wealth, family status, and moral character, especially when it came to marriage. Lady Bracknell’s interrogation of Jack’s proposal to marry Gwendolen demonstrates the three “Cs”—cash, class, and character. First she asks him about his finances and then his family relations, a measure of his class. That Jack has none—no family relations, or family name, reflects poorly on his character. Upon finding that Jack has no…

Name and Identity
Through Jack’s search for his origins and family name, Wilde satirizes the Victorian Era’s intense scrutiny of cash, class, and character. Wilde subversively prods this question through the name of “ Ernest ,” a Christian name, or given name, as opposed to a family name. The name of “Ernest” comes to symbolize different things for different people. For Gwendolen and Cecily it “inspires absolute confidence” but also symbolizes the ideal husband/ lover. For Jack, “Ernest”…

Hypocrisy, Folly, and Victorian Morality
A witty wordsmith, Wilde exposes the hypocrisy of the Victorians’ strict social mores through puns, paradoxes, epigrams, and inversions in the characters’ actions and dialogue. For instance the characters often say and do the opposite of what they mean, or intend. Gwendolen flips “style” and “sincerity” when she says, “In matters of grave importance, style, not sincerity is the vital thing.” One would expect that “sincerity” should take precedence over “style” in “matters of grave…

Men and Women in Love
In the game of love that Wilde plays throughout The Importance of Being Earnest , Jack and Algernon , who strive for love, are pitted against the fickleness of the women they desire. Even though Wilde assigns stereotypical gender roles to each sex—Jack and Algernon are suave dandies , while Cecily and Gwendolen are vapid beauties—when it comes to marriage and love, he places women in a position of power because they are able to…

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The score reflects the quality of the essay as a whole—its content, its style, its mechanics. Students are rewarded for what they do well. The score for an exceptionally well-written essay may be raised by 1 point above the otherwise appropriate score. In no case may a poorly written essay be scored higher than a 3.
Although not without flaws, these essays exhibit the student's ability to discuss a literary work with significant insight and understanding; to sustain control over a thesis; and to write with clarity, precision, coherence and—in the case of a 9 essay—with particular persuasiveness and/or stylistic flair.
The Victorian Era. The Victorian era, named after Queen Victoria, is a cultural period that lasted from approximately 1820 to the end of WWI. It's marked by a number of traits, including social conservatism, rigid gender roles, strict separation of classes, and strict modesty for both sexes. The era was very conventional, prizing rigidity, duty ...
2006 AP® ENGLISH LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION FREE-RESPONSE QUESTIONS (Form B) ... The Importance of Being Earnest Light in August Middle Passage Moby-Dick Mother Courage Obasan The Odyssey Peer Gynt Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead Song of Solomon STOP END OF EXAM . Title:
Summary Welcome to the LitCharts study guide on Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest. Created by the original team behind SparkNotes, LitCharts are the world's best literature guides. The Importance of Being Earnest: Introduction A concise biography of Oscar Wilde plus historical and literary context for The Importance of Being Earnest.
The Importance of Being Earnest Oscar Wilde Study Guide Full Text Mastery Quizzes PLUS Flashcards PLUS Essays Suggested Essay Topics 1. What is the overall effect of the play's references to death? How is death, as a theme, dealt with in the play? 2. Is Cecily a more realistic character than Gwendolen? Why or why not? 3.
The Importance of Being Earnest Jane Eyre Light in August Macbeth The Mayor of Casterbridge The Metamorphosis Middlemarch No Country for Old Men The Odyssey Oedipus Rex Orlando ... AP English Literature and Composition 2017 Free-Response Questions Author: ETS Subject:
The Importance of Being Earnest has a good deal to say about the nature of deceptive or superficial appearances, including the illusion of virtue that Jack projects and the signs of elegance, status, and propriety that Gwendolen, Lady Bracknell, and Miss Prism covet, as well as the phenomenon of hypocrisy, a word that derives from the ancient ...
See key examples and analysis of the literary devices Oscar Wilde uses in The Importance of Being Earnest, along with the quotes, themes, symbols, and characters related to each device. Sort by: Devices A-Z. Scene. Filter: All Literary Devices. Allusions 3 key examples. Dramatic Irony 6 key examples. Foreshadowing 4 key examples.
What function does each have in the play? 5. What attitudes of the aristocracy can be seen in Lady Bracknell's dialogue? 6. How is conflict developed in the play? 7. How does Wilde turn around well-known proverbs or epigrams to comment on Victorian attitudes? 1. Wilde's play has two settings — the city of London and the country.
Critical Essays Themes in The Importance of Being Earnest. Duty and Respectability. The aristocratic Victorians valued duty and respectability above all else. Earnestness — a determined and serious desire to do the correct thing — was at the top of the code of conduct. Appearance was everything, and style was much more important than substance.
Flashcards PLUS Full Play Analysis Oscar Wilde's farcical comedy The Importance of Being Earnest mocks the culture and manners of Victorian society, relying on satire and a comic resolution to make that mockery more palatable to viewers.
Fiction. LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Importance of Being Earnest, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work. The Art of Deception: Fact v. Fiction. As a leader of the Aesthetic movement, Wilde was especially interested in the relationship between life and art, pondering the eternal question, "Does ...
AP English Literature and Composition. Essays. 100% (9) 3. Shame Final - Google Docs. AP English Literature and Composition. Essays. 92% (25) 2. ... In fact, Oscar Wilde wrote The Importance of Being Earnest to include the notion that when women had power they wouldn't know what to do with it, like when Cecily and Gwendolen didn't know ...
AP Literature Summer Reading Assignment The Importance of Being Earnest - By Oscar Wilde Major Characters: 1. John (Jack/Ernest) Worthing, J.P. -‐ Jack Worthing is the main character of the novel and a responsible and respectable young man who leads a double life.
The importance of being earnest full play the importance of being earnest oscar wilde inc. 45 west 25m street new york 10010 7623 sunset boulevard hollywood. ... AP English Literature and Composition. Other. 100% (1) 1. 04.08 ways of veiwing wuthering heights. AP English Literature and Composition. Other. 100% (1) 5.
Products. $385.00 $577.50 Save $192.50. View Bundle. The Importance of Being Earnest Unit Bundle for AP Lit. This bundle contains materials for teaching Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest to AP English Literature ® and advanced literature students. This unit aligns with Unit 3 (Long Fiction I) and aligns with the essential skills of ...
The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde: AP Lit Roundtable & Annotations by Whippoorwill Humanities $16.00 PDF General OverviewThe Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde, as a longer drama, can function as the perfect transition between shorter and longer fiction in the AP Classroom.
Flashcards. PLUS. The Importance of Being Earnest is a novel by Oscar Wilde that was first published in 0 . Read the full text of The Importance of Being Earnest in its entirety, completely free.
Oscar Wilde's work, The Importance of Being Earnest, is full of veiled humor and wit. The characters use verbal sparring, ironic contradiction and questionable morals to navigate through their ...
Results for importance of being earnest ap literature 15 + results Sort by: Relevance View: List The Importance of Being Earnest Unit Test Created by Lit and More This forty-point test assesses AP ® Lit and advanced literature students' knowledge of Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest.
The Importance of Being Earnest is a play by Oscar Wilde that was first performed in 1895. A farcical comedy, the work mocks the culture and manners of Victorian society, relying on satire and a comic resolution to make that mockery more palatable to viewers.
Ironically, Ernest turns out to be just as fictional as Cecily's romance with him. She falls in love with Algernon after he introduces himself as Ernest, and she gives Algernon the backstory of her imagined romance as though he were involved in it. When she discovers Algernon's deception, she is happy to stay in love with him and her ...