Theme Of Persuasion And The Importance Of Being Earnest

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The novel, Persuasion, and the play, The Importance of Being Earnest, both have similar features in them. The conflict of both stories deals with social status, criticizing social mobility, and marriage within the same and different social classes. The authors Jane Austen and Oscar Wilde both draw the reader’s attention by telling how people were like in the 19th century Victorian era, then having the characters of their respective stories breaks those stereotypes. In Persuasion, Jane Austen focus on the idea of what living under social mobility was like. She illustrated it from a women’s point of view by discussing their class during her time in the 19th century. Austen’s novel showed how family members behave towards one another. Austen character’s, …show more content…

The only knowledge he had of his birth was the handbag he was found in at a train-station, and Lady Bracknell dismissed that knowledge as illegitimate by saying, “You can hardly imagine that I and Lord Bracknell would dream of allowing our only daughter- a girl brought up with the utmost care- to marry into cloak-room, and form an alliance with a parcel?” (Wilde 15). The parents of Gwendolyn did not want their daughter to marry out of her social class. They felt that she was going to marry out of wealth, because to marry someone you had to uphold an image and remain in your same social class. Some people in the Victorian era saw this rule as ridiculous, but most of society upheld it like the law, but per Michael Patrick Gillespie, “Wilde’s most successful effort at playwriting brings into equilibrium all the distinct formal and thematic elements… from several equally valid points of view” (Gillespie). Because in the 19th century, it was consider being a law, because you were not allowed to marry within a different social class. That’s why Earnest had to become two different people within two different social classes. As he mentions in the play. “Well, my name is Earnest in town and Jack in the country” (Wilde 5), and “My dear Algy, I don’t know whether you will understand my real motives. Your hardly serious enough. When one is placed in the position of guardian, one must adopt a very high moral tone on all subjects. Its one’s duty to do so. And as a high moral tone can hardly be said to conduce very much to either one’s health or one’s happiness, to get up to town I have always pretended to have a younger brother of the name of Earnest, who lives in the Albany, and gets into the most dreadful scrapes. That, my dear Algy, is the whole truth pure and simple” (Wilde 6). That’s the persona he uses when he proposed to

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