Thinking Activity :- The Importance of Being Ernest
Hello Readers! This blog is responce to the Thinking Activity of play The Importance of Being Ernest, assigned by Dilip Barad sir, Department of English, MKBU. In this blog I am going to present some alloted question on the basis of my understanding.
Oscar Wilde ( 1854 - 1900 ):-
"Be Yourself, everyone else is already taken".
- Oscar Wilde
Oscar Wilde was a poet and Dramatist. Wilde was born of professional and literary parents. He was a spokesman for the late 19th century Aesthetic movement in England, which advocated art for art's shake, and he was object of celebrated civil and criminal suits involving homosexuality and ending in his imprisonment. His Notable works are below.
- A Woman of No Importance
- Lady Windermere's Fan
- The Importance of Being Earnest
- The picture of Dorian Gray
- Salome
Characters in the play - The Importance of Being Earnest:-
- Jack Worthing
- Algernon Moncrieff
- Gwendolen Fairfax
- Cecily Cardew
- Lady Bracknell
- Miss Prism
- Lane
- Canon Chasuble
- Merriman
Jack Worthing:-
Jack Worthing is a protagonist of the play. He was a discovered as an infant by the Late Mr. Thomas Cardew in a handbag in the cloakroom of a railway station in London. Jack has grown up to be a seemingly responsible and respectable young man, a major landowner and justice of the peace in Hertfordshire, where he has a country estate. In Hertfordshire, where he is known by what he imagines to be his real name. Jack, he is a pillar of the community.
Jack Worthing is a gaurdian to Mr. Cardew's granddaughter, Cicely and has other duties and people who depend on him. For years , he has also pretended to have an irresponsible younger brother named Ernest, whom he is always having to bail out of some mischief. In fact, he himself is the reprobate brother Earnest.
Ernest is the name Jack goes by in London, where he really goes on these occasions. 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 flouts 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 enables Jack to escape the boundaries of his real life and act as the wouldn't dare to under his real identity. Ernest provides a convenient excuse and disguise for Jack, and Jack feels no qualms about involving Ernest whenever necessary.
Jack wants to be seen as upright and moral. But he doesn't care what lies he has to tell his loved ones in order to be able to misbehave. Through Ernest has always been Jack's unsavory alter ego, as the play progress Jack must aspire to become Ernest, in name if not behaviour. Untill he seeks to marry Gwendolen, Jack has used Ernest as an escape from real life, but Gwendolen's fixation on the name Ernest obligates Jack to embrace his deception in order to pursue the real life he desires. Jack has always managed to get what he wants by using Ernest as his fallback. And his lie eventually threatens to undo him. Though Jack never really gets his comeuppance. He must scramble to reconcile his two worlds in order to get what he ultimately desires and to fully understand who he is. So the whole play is based on this Character. Thus, we can say that Jack Worthing's character is most important in the play The Importance of Being Earnest.
Gwendolen Fairfax:-
Gwendolen Fairfax is a female character in the play. Gwendolen suggests the qualities of conventional Victorian womanhood. She is artificial and pretentious. Gwendolen is in love with Jack. Whom she knows as Ernest and she is fixed on this name. This preoccupation serves as a metaphor for the preoccupation of the Victorian middle and upper middle classes with the appearance of virtue and honor. Gwendolen is so caught up in finding a husband named Ernest, whose name, she says, "inspires absolute confidence", that she can't even see that the man calling himself Ernest is fooling her with an extensive deception. In this way, her own image consciousness blurs her judgement.
Through more self consciously intellectual than Lady Bracknell, Gwendolen is cut from very much the same Cloth as her mother. She is similarly strong minded and speak with unassailable authority on matters of taste and morality, just as Lady Bracknell does. She is both a model and an arbiter of elegant fashion and sophistication. And nearly everything she says and does is calculated for effect. As Jack fears, Gwendolen does indeed show signs of becoming her mother " in about a hundred and fifty years," but she is likeable, as is Lady Bracknell, because her pronouncement are so outrageous.
Cecily Cardew:-
Cecily Cardew is another female character of the play. If Gwendolen is a product of London high society, Cecily is its antithesis. She is a child of nature, as ingenuous and unspoiled as a pink rose , to which Algernon compares her in Act II. Her ingenuity is believed by her fascination with wickedness. She is obsessed with the name Ernest just as Gwendolen is, but wickedness is primarily what leads her to fall in love with Uncle Jack's brother, whose reputation is wayward enough to intrigue her like Algernon and Jack, she is a Fantasist. She has invented her romance with Ernest and elaborated it with as much artistry and enthusiasm as the men have their spurious obligations and secret identities.
Though she does not have an alter ego as vivid or developed as Bunbury or Ernest, her claim that she and Algernon/Ernest are already engaged is rooted in the fantasy world she's created around Ernest. Cecily is probably the most realistically drawn character in the play, and she is the only character who does not speak in epigrams. Her charm lies in her idiosyncratic cast of mind and her imaginative capacity, qualities that derive from wilde's notion of life as a work of art. These elements of her personality make her a perfect mate for Algernon.
Thus, we can say that both the female character is play very vital role in the play. And Jack Worthing is also protagonist of the play Jude the Obscure. The Whole story is around these characters. So these all characters are very important of the play The Importance of Being Earnest.
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