Abstract

To the modern reader, the Nineteenth Century England has always been the reminiscent of unrelenting ideals regarding social codes of conduct. Although such ideals have been widely criticized, they were passed off as unquestionably natural and necessary to be carried out during the Victorian era. Yet Oscar Wilde, the renowned dramatist of the time, was one of the authors who dared to put to challenge the accepted prescribed gender roles exposing their constructed essence using his insurmountable wit. The current article aims at analyzing the apparently transgressive gender roles in Oscar Wilde’s play; An Ideal Husband, with the aid of Judith Butler’s theory of performativity, a theory which disavows the concept of an inherent gender identity in favor of the idea that gendered behaviors are the consequence of performing certain discursively assigned acts.

Highlights

  • To the modern reader, the Nineteenth Century England has always been the reminiscent of unrelenting ideals regarding social codes of conduct

  • Well-known for its breath-taking haste towards development, the Nineteenth Century England is an age of wonders, an age whose rapid changes have ever since bewildered those who take an interest in turning over the pages of its history

  • The rapid change to modernization forced the working class to leave the rural scenes of England and swarm to the cities to seek jobs in new factories instead which in turn brought about a widespread unemployment of those relying on manual jobs to earn a living and the new economic philosophy of laissez-fair which saw the elimination of governmentfrom regulating the working conditions profitable added but more insult to the injury

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Summary

Introduction

The Nineteenth Century England has always been the reminiscent of unrelenting ideals regarding social codes of conduct.

Results
Conclusion
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