Unit 7: Victorian Era
- Intro to The Victorian Era
- Texts
- See Brit Lit - Historical Eras/Contexts (in Notability) or get it again in Google Classroom if necessary.
- Nails
- What were some of the main people, events, and ideas of the Victorian Period?
- Oscar Wilde
- Texts
- Nails
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| He's an English Man! |
- What is a comedy of manners and how does Wilde's Importance of Being Earnest qualify as such?
- What does the word "earnestness" or "earnest" mean and how does Wilde use it as a pun (the name "Ernest") that critiques Victorian virtues?
- How does the subtitle "A Trivial Comedy for Serious People" contribute to Wilde's tone and thematic development?
- How does Wilde use epigram, hyperbole, understatement, and irony to satirize (critique) Victorian values and institutions?
- Lit Terms
- Comedy of Manners - A comic drama consisting of five or three acts in which the attitudes and customs of a society are critiqued and satirized according to high standards of intellect and morality.
- e.g. Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest
- Hyperbole - Calculated overstatement, exaggeration
- e.g. "I'm so hungry I could eat a ________"
- e.g. "He ate everything in the house."
- Understatement - Says less than is intended
- e.g. "Adolf Hitler was a naughty man."
- e.g. "I hate to seem inquisitive, but would you kindly inform me who I am?" (Oscar Wilde)
- Paradox - Using contradiction in a manner that oddly makes sense on a deeper level.
- e.g. "Without laws, we can have no freedom."
- e.g. "The simplicity of your character makes you exquisitely incomprehensible to me." (Oscar Wilde)
- e.g. "I adore political parties. They are the only place left to us where people don't talks politics" (Wilde).
- Epigram - a short, witty, often paradoxical—sometimes satirical—statement designed to surprise the audience
- e.g. "Swans sing before they die--'twere no bad thing / Should certain people die before they sing!" (Coleridge)
- e.g. "What is an epigram? a dwarfish whole, / Its body brevity, and wit its soul" (Coleridge)
- e.g. "Forty years of romance make a woman look like a ruin and forty years of marriage make her look like a public building" (Oscar Wilde).
- e.g. "Relations are simply a tedious pack of people who haven't got
the remotest knowledge of how to live, nor the smallest instinct about
when to die" (Wilde).
- e.g. "All women become like their mothers. That is their tragedy. No man does. That's his" (Wilde).
- e.g.
"I hope you have not been leading a double life, pretending to be
wicked and being really good all the time. That would be hypocrisy"
(Wilde).
- e.g. "God made women beautiful so that men would love them; and he made them stupid so that they could love men" (attributed to La Belle Otero).
- Victorian Poets
- Nails
- What are some of the common ideas and tones expressed by Victorian poets . . . and why?
Indeed
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