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  1. InThe Importance of Being Earnest, Lady Bracknell Essay

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    lady bracknell essay

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    lady bracknell essay

  4. Importance of Being Earnest

    lady bracknell essay

  5. Lady Bracknell Character Analysis

    lady bracknell essay

  6. Maggie Smith as Lady Bracknell in The Importance of Being

    lady bracknell essay

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  1. Lady Bracknell interviews Jack Worthing

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  1. Lady Augusta Bracknell

    Lady Bracknell firmly believes the middle and lower classes should never be taught to think or question. It would breed anarchy and the possibility that the upper class might lose its privileged position. Wilde has created, with Augusta Bracknell, a memorable instrument of his satiric wit, questioning all he sees in Victorian upper-class society.

  2. Lady Augusta Bracknell

    Lady Augusta Bracknell, fictional character, the mother of Gwendolen Fairfax in Oscar Wilde 's The Importance of Being Earnest (1895). An imposing dowager, Lady Bracknell is the embodiment of conventional upper-class Victorian respectability. She vehemently disapproves of the romance between her daughter and Jack Worthing, the protagonist of ...

  3. Lady Bracknell's Character in The Importance of Being Earnest

    Lady Bracknell is a pivotal character in Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest. As Gwendolen 's mother, she represents the strict moral and social codes of the late-Victorian period ...

  4. Lady Bracknell Character Analysis

    Lady Bracknell. Lady Bracknell is the total antagonist of the play. She is Gwendolen's mother. Also, she is Algernon's aunt who is described as snobbish, mercenary and domineering. This lady is a strongly oriented matriarch person; she doesn't even understand that lead herself as a tyrant, she strongly believes money is more important ...

  5. Act I: Part 2

    Lady Bracknell and her daughter, Gwendolen, arrive. She is expecting her nephew, Algernon, at a dinner party that evening, but Algy explains that he must go see his invalid friend, Bunbury, in the country. However, he promises to make arrangements for the music at her reception on Saturday. They exchange small talk about various members of the ...

  6. Characterisation Lady Bracknell The Importance of Being Earnest: Advanced

    Characterisation Lady Bracknell. Lady Bracknell's function in the drama is pivotal. She is the prime reason for the plot's complications. For example, if she were to agree to the marriage of Gwendolen and Jack, there would be no plot at all; and Algy has invented Bunbury - another source of complication - precisely in order to escape from her and the social obligations she imposes on him.

  7. Lady Bracknell's character profile and her satirical role in The

    Summary: Lady Bracknell is a domineering, status-conscious aristocrat who embodies the absurdity of Victorian social norms. Her satirical role in The Importance of Being Earnest includes ...

  8. The Importance of Being Earnest: Act 1, Part 2 Summary & Analysis

    Act 2, Part 1. Themes and Colors Key. Summary. Analysis. Lane announces the arrival of Lady Bracknell and Miss Gwendolen Fairfax. Gwendolen flirts with Jack, while Lady Bracknell gossips with Algernon about her recently widowed friend. Lady Bracknell asks for one of the cucumber sandwiches Algernon has promised her.

  9. The Importance of Being Earnest

    The Importance of Being Earnest Summary and Analysis of Act I, Scene 2. Act I - Part 2: Lane introduces Lady Bracknell and Gwendolen. Algernon express horror that there are no cucumber sandwiches. He tells Lady Bracknell that he will be unable to attend her dinner tonight, as Bunbury is ill. He promises to be present to arrange music at her ...

  10. A Feminist Marxist and Psychoanalytic Analysis of The Importance of

    Lady Bracknell's relentless pursuit of a suitable husband for Gwendolen reflects the societal pressure placed on women to marry well. Lady Bracknell's famous line, "To lose one parent may be regarded as a misfortune; to lose both looks like carelessness," underscores the commodification of marriage in a society, where social status and wealth ...

  11. The Importance of Being Earnest Essay

    So the character of Lady Bracknell observes at the conclusion of Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest. The play as a whole is one firmly preoccupied with the idea of surfaces and their importance in Victorian society, where it must have often seemed (especially to someone as flamboyant as Wilde) that appearance mattered more than ...

  12. Lady Bracknell: Character in The Importance of Being Earnest

    Some of Lady Bracknell's comments are brilliant in witty and paradoxical qualities. Her opinion about country-side as an inappropriate place for simple, unspoiled Gwendolen to live in contradicts the general view that the serene, unspoiled environment of country-side suits most the woman of such plain nature, whereas busy and complicated city life goes well with the clever, materialistic ...

  13. Lady Bracknell Analysis

    Lady Bracknell Analysis. 933 Words4 Pages. Lady Bracknell interviews Jack. Marriage in the Victorian era was very different to marriage nowadays. Love actually played a very minor role in the majority of weddings that took place. There were certain "rules" that you had to follow, as shown in the scene where Lady Bracknell questions Jack.

  14. Lady Bracknell The Importance Of Being Earnest

    Lady Bracknell is a prominent character in The Importance of Being Earnest who is extremely critical of her reputation and how she is regarded by others. The way in which she discusses affluence and the luxurious life she lives shows she has little …show more content…. Lady Bracknell displays her conceited attitude by explaining to Jack ...

  15. Marriage in the Importance of Being Earnest: Analysis

    Indeed, Lady Bracknell does not seem to have respect for the marriage institution, and that is why she tries to pair Algernon with Mary, who is already married. (Wilde 11) Although Algernon is cynical about marriage institution and thinks that people's opinions on the topic are "somewhat lax," his views on marriage and divorce change once ...

  16. Why did Lady Bracknell in "The Importance of Being Earnest" say, "When

    Essays and Criticism ... Lady Bracknell has just learned the the woman her nephew, Algernon, wishes to marry, Cecily Cardew, is very rich, and though she first opposed the match, when she finds ...

  17. (PDF) The Importance of Being Married: Lady Bracknell as Marriage

    Through a liberal feminist perspective, this essay investigates the unconventional marital views of the fictional character Elizabeth Bennet. These are analyzed and compared to the traditional marital opinions of the novel's social environment. ... 1982 xvii). Lady Bracknell scorns Jack and Cecily as potential mates for Gwendolyn and ...

  18. Lady Bracknell Essay

    Good morning, Mr. Worthing!" said Lady Bracknell, upon hearing of Jack's upbringing (Wilde). The mother of Gwendolen, she has very high standards when it comes to choosing a mate for her daughter. Any whisper of marriage for her or her nephew, Algernon, is met with a long string of questions about a number of different issues.

  19. Lady Bracknell ESSAY Flashcards

    Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like introduction - Wilde presents the character of Lady Bracknell as a tool which he uses to..., Lady Bracknell fulfils Victorian expectations of adhering to social norms, which for the upper and middle classes of the time, involved prioritising surface and mercenary matters. However,..., Contrastingly, Wilde also explores a more ...

  20. The Lady Vanishes (with Matthew J. Elliott and Ian Potter)

    Are storm clouds gathering overhead in your late 1930s European home? Are you a useless arse who wants to make peasants dance in your bedroom (purely for research purposes), or a plucky gal embarking on a depressing bachelorette party before settling into loveless British marriage (in other words, a British marriage)?. Perhaps you're keen to commit adultery somewhere the papers won't spot you ...