An Ideal Husband - Context Flashcards
What is Lord Goring
He is the rasonner:
Upholds social movement (Varty, 2019)
Aestheticism
“Art for art’s sake” - Oscar Wilde
Attitudes towards education:
Most lower class children went to work to provide for their families rather than going to school
Social class
Social classes were important as it determined how people lived and where treated
“Wilde attacks the institution of marriage”
(Varty, 2019)
He critiques marriage through ‘An Ideal Husband’
- He questions what is an ideal?
Wilde’s critique of idealism
(Varty, 2019)
Advocating for social change
- Mismatch between the real and the ideal
- Wilde wants to bring about the idea of moral relativism rather than moral absolutism
Sir Robert Chiltern’s past
(Varty, 2019)
Structured as a “man with a past”
- Turnaround for Wilde as traditionally it is the women who has the past
Archer (1895)
Review from when the play when it first came out
He didn’t see any change in Robert or Gertrude’s Chiltern’s behaviour
Were women expected to marry
Yes and they were also expected to be ladylike and perform tasks in the household
Purpose of ‘An Ideal Husband’
A well-made play
Very didactic –> meant to teach the audience
Role of the Dandy
- Common in 19th and early 20th-Century Europe
- Men who were known for their commitment to (usually extravagant) fashion
- Wilde was considered a Dandy
- Lord Goring is the Dandy as he applies joy and humour to the pursuit of truth whilst consistently using wit
Gender Roles
- Men and Women inhabited ‘separate spheres’
–> Clearly defined with very little overlap - Men were expected to be formally educated and to work in the public sphere
- Women were not expected to be formally educated and their focus was more on the domestic, private sphere
- Society expected women to marry and serve as moral guidance in the home for both their children and husband – publicly their main role was to serve as a hostess for social gatherings
Mrs Chevely - Gender Roles
Women were supposed to seek good marriages and never admit sexual desire but Chevely goes against this when she says she knew Baron Arnheim “intimately”
–> Women were not supposed to cast morality aside completely but she does to pursue amoral self-interest and sexual pleasure
Mrs Chevely - Etiquette
Mrs Cheveley breaks the “Victorian rules of etiquette” by threatening to expose Robert’s past.