In ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’ there is a tension between the artificial behaviour dictated by society and the natural way in which people w...

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In ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’, Oscar Wilde’s characters frenetically seek to convey themselves in a society which has an unyielding and distinct set of limitations expected of the individual. The conventions of marriage and love, together with the compulsion of projecting a mask of virtue, causes characters to be trapped in a metaphysical corset which blocks the true expression of the individual to surface. The restrictive nature of these restraints causes characters such as Jack and Algernon to pursue greater liberty and find it within the conception of “Bunbury;” a figurative subordinate façade, which allows them to escape from the overbearing and restricting roles in their society. The contradiction of a character being forced to create another mask to escape from their original façade is illustrative of the superficiality of their society that is fanatical about outward appearances. The characters that are unable to form this secondary façade are despondently imprisoned within their “corset;” forced to twist sincere sentiment to fit the conventions of their society. Cons...

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