The Importance Of Being Earnest Research Paper

555 Words2 Pages

English 1404-3
14 May 2016
Victorian Hunger The play The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde was written and set during the Victorian era, a time when the desire for social approval and status controlled the rituals, appearances, and attitudes of the middle and upper class. The search for moral recognition in society was the commonly conspired front that masked the people’s selfish ambitions. Oscar Wilde felt strongly towards the reformation he believed his time period needed, having been personally affected by the oppressive Victorian Society about his own sexual exploitations, and wrote The Importance of Being Earnest as an outrageous attack on the faults of society in order to expose its frailty. The play is able to broadcast his …show more content…

However, Wilde became accused of “homosexual offenses” (Kraus) in 1895 and when he refused to leave England for his “scandal,” he was brought to court on account of what the Victorian society believed to be sexual treason. He was claimed guilty and sentenced to two years of hard labor and transported to Wandsworth Prison. What supplemented the suspicion of Wilde’s sexual affairs was the running of his newest play The Importance of Being Earnest, a play that exposed and ridiculed the abuses of society in regards to sexuality and marriage. “Simultaneously he (Wilde) questioned his sexual orientation. Wilde’s realization that he was more homosexual than heterosexual changed his life” (Kraus xix). This epiphany aided in his Aestheticist sentiments towards the Victorian society’s abuses and helped inspire the connotative and suggestive language of The Importance of Being Earnest. “The Aestheticists thrived on being poseurs; they relished the artificial and doing what oppressive Victorian society looked upon as ‘evil” (Kraus xiv). Wilde’s masks his societal oppression and outrage through clever and witty exchanges between the characters on stage, and never directly states the sexual exploration and hypocrisies that were common in his era. A quote from Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest states that “Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone” (22). The meaning behind his simile is that the basis of his work and the personal sexual struggles all must be written in a sub text style so as not to “prove a serious danger to the upper classes” (22). Wilde balances between exposing the truth of his impulsive Victorian Society and writing under the radar of what is socially acceptable to satire by weaving a complex system of secret sexual encryptions into his characters dialogues

Open Document