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Week5 段馨君 副教授 國立交通大學 人文社會學系 Comedy &. Comedy Originated in early phallic rites with dances, songs, and parades of phallic symbols. Emerged in Greece and.

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Presentation on theme: "Week5 段馨君 副教授 國立交通大學 人文社會學系 Comedy &. Comedy Originated in early phallic rites with dances, songs, and parades of phallic symbols. Emerged in Greece and."— Presentation transcript:

1 Week5 段馨君 副教授 國立交通大學 人文社會學系 Comedy &

2 Comedy Originated in early phallic rites with dances, songs, and parades of phallic symbols. Emerged in Greece and dramatized the ludicrous or some absurd ugliness in human nature that was not truly destructive of self or others

3 Theory of Comedy Comic action exposes human folly and celebrates human survival. Element: comic action, plot, hero, reversals, recognition, resolution. Comedy usually begins with a rigid circumstance.

4 Theory of Comedy Two types of self-assertion in comedy – ridiculous figure – individual who removes the obstacles to happiness and well- being

5 Tragedy V.S. Comedy All tragedies are finished by death/ All comedies are ended by marriage. Tragedy has consequences in the moral world for individual/ Comic action has consequences in the social world for the group. The tragic plot is usually more plausible/ The comic plot is more involved.

6 The Comedy of Manners Written between 1660 and 1700, revealed the foibles of a brittle, fun-loving, and witty upper class in London. Mirrored the polite behavior and foibles of the society that watched the play.

7 The Importance of being Earnest

8 Background Written between 1660 and 1700, revealed the foibles of a brittle, fun-loving, and witty upper class in London. Mirrored the polite behavior and foibles of the society that watched the play.

9 Background An early experiment in Victorian melodrama. Part satire, part comedy of manners, and part intellectual farce. This play seems to have nothing at stake because the world it presents is so blatantly and ostentatiously artificial.

10 Background A delightful but utterly frivolous and superficial comedy, a view that partly reflects the mindset of a period in which homosexuality remained a guarded topic.

11 Background An utterly improbable play with virtually no connection with life as we know or feel it. See the play as unique, the one farce that depends on language rather than physical action.

12 About the play author · Oscar Wilde genre · Social comedy; comedy of manners; satire; intellectual farce time and place written · Summer 1894 in Worthing, England tone · Light, scintillating, effervescent, deceptively flippant setting (time) · 1890s setting (place) · London (Act I) and Hertfordshire, a rural county not far from London (Acts II and III)

13 Topics of the play Money Education Sincerity Class relationship The Nature of Marriage The Constraints of Morality

14 Character John (Jack/Ernest) Worthing, J.P. - The play’s protagonist. Jack Worthing is a seemingly responsible and respectable young man who leads a double life. In Hertfordshire, where he has a country estate, Jack is known as Jack. In London he is known as Ernest.

15 Algernon Moncrieff The play’s secondary hero. Algernon is a charming, idle, decorative bachelor, nephew of Lady Bracknell, cousin of Gwendolen Fairfax, and best friend of Jack Worthing, whom he has known for years as Ernest. Character

16 Gwendolen Fairfax Algernon’s cousin and Lady Bracknell’s daughter.Gwendolen is in love with Jack, whom she knows as Ernest. Character

17 Cecily Cardew Jack’s ward, the granddaughter of the old gentlemen who found and adopted Jack when Jack was a baby. Like Gwendolen, she is obsessed with the name Ernest, but she is even more intrigued by the idea of wickedness. Character

18 Lady Bracknell Algernon’s snobbish, mercenary, and domineering aunt and Gwendolen’s mother. Lady Bracknell married well, and her primary goal in life is to see her daughter do the same. Character

19 Plot Overview A young man and a young woman wish to marry, but an apparently insurmountable obstacle interposes. Wilde doubles the lovers, giving us two young men and two young women.

20 Plot rising action · Algernon discovers that Jack is leading a double life and that he has a pretty young ward named Cecily. The revelation of Jack’s origins causes Lady Bracknell to forbid his union with Gwendolen.

21 Plot Identifying himself as “Ernest,” Algernon visits Jack’s house in the country and falls in love with Cecily.

22 Plot climax · Gwendolen and Cecily discover that both Jack and Algernon have been lying to them and that neither is really named “Ernest.”

23 Plot falling action · Miss Prism is revealed to be the governess who mistakenly abandoned Jack as a baby and Jack is discovered to be Algernon’s elder brother.

24 Film-DVD Director: Anthony Asquith Leading actor: Michael Redgrave Year: 1952 Showing Part: Both girls found their men lying to them From 60:00 to 60:10

25 Film-DVD Director: Anthony Asquith Leading actor: Michael Redgrave Year: 1952 Showing Part: Both girls like the name Earnest From 15:49 to 19:56 From 54:10 to 55:37

26 Film-clips Director: Oliver Parker Leading actor: Rupert Everett and Colin Firth Year: 2002 Showing Part: Algy’s proposal From 03:13 to 06:50 http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=horJHn- AQq8&feature=mfu_in_order&list =UL http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=horJHn- AQq8&feature=mfu_in_order&list =UL

27 Film-clips Director: Oliver Parker Leading actor: Rupert Everett and Colin Firth Year: 2002 Showing Part: Cigarette case From 00:00 to 06:03 http://www.youtube.com/watc h?v=dcnbutsPmyM http://www.youtube.com/watc h?v=dcnbutsPmyM

28 Conflict major conflict · Jack faces many obstacles to his romantic union with Gwendolen. One obstacle is presented by Lady Bracknell, who objects to what she refers to as Jack’s “origins” (i.e. his inability to define his family background). Another obstacle is Gwendolen’s obsession with the name “Ernest,” since she does not know Jack’s real name.

29 Themes, motifs and symbols Themes · The nature of marriage; the constraints of morality; hypocrisy vs. inventiveness; the importance of not being “earnest” Motifs · Puns; inversion; death; the dandy Symbols · The double life; food; fiction and writing

30 Reference http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Th e_Importance_of_Being_Earnes t http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Th e_Importance_of_Being_Earnes t http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/ earnest/context.html http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/ earnest/context.html


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