The Importance of Being Earnest - Context, Comedy and Authorial Methods Flashcards

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1
Q

What are some comic concepts in TIOBE?

A
  • Marriage, love, romance
  • Disguise and deception
  • Mistaken identity
  • The ‘Green World’ - a place of disorder and confusion
  • The journey into happiness and comic resolution
  • Farce, slapstick (exaggerated physical comedy), physical comedy
  • Comic rivalry
  • Subversion (undermines the values of society)
  • Parody (of Victorian melodrama)
  • Complex plotting/sub-plotting
  • Masters and servants
  • Satire
  • Confusion and misunderstanding
  • Stock comic characters (eg. heroes, romantic couples, villains etc.)
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2
Q

What is hyperbole?

A

Exaggeration for comic effect

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3
Q

What is some examples of symbolism in TIOBE? Give examples

A
  • Food - a catalyst for personal and social conflict
  • The handbag - comic misfortune
  • Cigarette case - Jack’s double life
  • Cecily’s diary - make-believe, fiction
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4
Q

How is setting important in TIOBE?

A
  • Town vs country antithesis

- Used to mock Victorian society

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5
Q

What is a paradox?

A

A statement that contradicts itself, or is false/absurd

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6
Q

What is irony?

A

A statement which creates humour through saying the opposite of what is expected

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7
Q

What is ‘the well-made play’?

A

It features uncertain origins, secrets from the past and letters

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8
Q

What is a comedy of manners?

A

It mocks and makes fun of upper-class Victorian manners and behaviours

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9
Q

What is comic structure?

A

Starts with a problem > obstacles > resolving in marriage

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10
Q

Describe how the Aesthetic movement is relevant to TIOBE

A
  • ‘Art for Art’s sake’
  • The concept of beauty being more important than narrative
  • ‘Dandy’ figures live for art and pleasure
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11
Q

Describe how social class is relevant to TIOBE

A
  • Wilde was a social outsider (Irish)
  • TIOBE questions the authority of the upper classes
  • TIOBE examines the place of the lower classes through the use of servants
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12
Q

Describe how gender roles and marriage are relevant to TIOBE

A
  • Set in a patriarchal society, where marriage is formal and based on status
  • Sexuality is a taboo
  • Women’s roles are examined and questioned (Lady Bracknell dominates her conversations)
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13
Q

Describe how behaviour, morality and religion are relevant to TIOBE

A
  • Social inequality highlighted
  • Aestheticism challenges Victorian norms
  • Religion is shown to be a superficial concept
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14
Q

What is the Separate Spheres Debate?

A
  • Men are the ones who are working and earning money

- Women are maternal and should stay at home

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15
Q

What is it meant by ‘the New Woman’?

A

Describes women who want to get rid of their stereotypes and branch out in life

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16
Q

What were some positive connotations of the New Woman?

A
  • Intelligent
  • Educated
  • Attractive
  • Employable
  • Active
17
Q

What were some negative connotations of the New Woman?

A
  • Manly
  • Unwomanly
  • An ‘immoral bluestocking’ (an educated woman who doesn’t conform to moral norms) with no hope to marry