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The Annotated Importance of Being Earnest
Harvard University Press, 2015 Paper: 978-0-674-04898-0 Library of Congress Classification PR5818.I4 2015 Dewey Decimal Classification 822.8
ABOUT THIS BOOK | REVIEWS
ABOUT THIS BOOK
“The truth is rarely pure and never simple,” declares Algernon early in Act One of The Importance of Being Earnest, and were it either, modern literature would be “a complete impossibility.” It is a moment of sly, winking self-regard on the part of the playwright, for The Importance is itself the sort of complex modern literary work in which the truth is neither pure nor simple. Wilde’s greatest play is full of subtexts, disguises, concealments, and double entendres. Continuing the important cultural work he began in his award-winning uncensored edition of The Picture of Dorian Gray, Nicholas Frankel shows that The Importance needs to be understood in relation to its author’s homosexuality and the climate of sexual repression that led to his imprisonment just months after it opened at London’s St. James’s Theatre on Valentine’s Day 1895. See other books on: Classics | Foundlings | Frankel, Nicholas | Identity (Psychology) | Wilde, Oscar See other titles from Harvard University Press |
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