Characters & Relationships
Plot & Structure
Symbols & Motifs
Themes & Social Critique
Authorial Choices & Craft
100

What is Jack’s “double life,” and why does he maintain it?

A: He pretends to be “Ernest” in the city to escape social expectations and behave freely.

100

What major discovery resolves the play’s central conflict?

 Jack learns he is Ernest and Algernon’s brother.

100

What does the name “Ernest” symbolize?

The Victorian obsession with appearances and moral labels.

100

What social institution is Wilde primarily satirizing?

Victorian marriage.

100

Why does Wilde rely so heavily on epigrams?

To mock social conventions through witty inversion.

200

Why is Gwendolen so attached to the name “Ernest”?

 She believes the name signifies sincerity and moral uprightness, revealing her superficiality

200

What is “Bunburying,” and how does it drive the plot?

Algernon’s invented invalid friend allows him to escape obligations and create comic complications.

200

What do diaries represent in the play?

Self‑invention and the blurring of truth and fiction

200

How does the play critique class expectations?

It exposes their arbitrariness and hypocrisy through exaggerated characters.

200

How does dramatic irony enhance the comedy?

The audience knows more than the characters, heightening absurdity.

300

How does Algernon’s relationship with food reflect his personality?

His constant eating symbolizes indulgence, selfishness, and comic disregard for social norms.

300

Why does Wilde structure the play around mistaken identities?

To satirize the arbitrary nature of social labels and Victorian seriousness.

300

How does food function as a recurring motif?

It symbolizes indulgence, triviality, and the characters’ lack of restraint.

300

How does Wilde portray gender roles?

He mocks rigid expectations by giving women agency and men frivolity.

300

How does Wilde use inversion as a comedic device?

He reverses expectations to expose hypocrisy

(e.g., trivial things treated seriously).

400

What motivates Lady Bracknell’s interrogation of Jack?

She prioritizes social status and propriety, revealing Victorian obsession with class.

400

How does the tea scene between Cecily and Gwendolen function structurally?

A: It escalates conflict through dramatic irony and comedic misunderstanding

400

What does the handbag symbolize?

The absurdity of basing identity and social worth on arbitrary origins.

400

How does the play explore the theme of identity?

Through double lives and mistaken identities that reveal identity as performance.

400

How does Wilde use farce to critique society?

Exaggerated situations reveal the ridiculousness of social norms.

500

How do Cecily and Gwendolen’s interactions parody romantic relationships?

Their instant rivalry and equally instant reconciliation mock sentimental clichés and social pretenses.

500

How does Wilde use the final revelation to critique Victorian values?

The absurd resolution exposes how identity and respectability hinge on trivial details.

500

How does Wilde use clothing (e.g., mourning attire) symbolically?

Clothing becomes a tool for deception and commentary on performative identity.

500

How does Wilde use satire to critique Victorian morality?

By exposing moral seriousness as shallow, performative, and easily manipulated.

500

How does Wilde’s use of symmetry (parallel scenes) contribute to meaning?

It highlights the artificiality of social rituals and the predictability of Victorian behavior.