Friday, November 29, 2019
Oscar Wilde Influence Essays - Operas, Anglo-Irish People
  Oscar Wilde Influence    One of the most difficult obstacles a playwright has to overcome is finding a  way to engage and interest their audience to their piece. Often having to deal  with such problems such as boredom, inattentiveness, or just a general lack of  interest, playwrights often invent dramatic devices that entice and entertain  their audiences. An example of this is the character Lane in Oscar Wilde's    "The Importance of Being Earnest." Not only does he portray what the public  sentiment is like, he also offers a channel for Wilde to portray the handling of  the "lower orders" by the English upper class. Lane, as any good servant  should be, is loyal and trustworthy towards his master Algernon. Lane dutifully  obliges to his master's requests, and even defends Algernon when he gets in  trouble. For example, when discussing with Lady Bracknell the subject of the  missing cucumber sandwiches, Lane quickly replies, "There were no cucumbers in  the markets this morning,...I went down twice." The reader and the audience  are both wise to this ploy. Lane's character also serves a very interesting  dramatic function in this piece, in that he serves as a facilitator for Wilde to  comment on social perceptions of not only marriage, but of the lower classes as  a whole. Before the audience is introduced to Jack, Algernon comments,    "Lane's views on marriage seem somewhat lax. Really, if the lower orders  don't set us a good example, what on earth is the use of them? They seem, as a  class, to have absolutely no sense of moral responsibility." This is a rather  bold statement, and it relates to the piece in that it portrays"aristocratic" sentiment towards marriage and society. It also serves a  function in portraying that aristocratic sentiment is not always the correct  one. The comment shows more that this elitist sentiment is skewed, and out of  touch with reality. If it were correct that Lane had no sense of moral  responsibility, he probably would not have saved his master from inevitable  shame later in the act. While doing this produces some humor in the audience, it  is interesting to note that Algernon's perceptions of his servant are so  different from how Lane is portrayed in the piece. Lane allows the audience to  see how warped high-class perceptions are of society. In the end, Lane is less  of a servant to Algernon, and more of a servant to the audience, for he allows  them to see things the way they really are in society.    
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