Genre

The Importance of Being Earnest is a social comedy play. It call also be called a comedy of manners, satire and an intellectual farce.

Tone

The tone of the play is light, scintillating, effervescent, and deceptively flippant.

Setting (Time & Place)

The Importance of Being Earnest is set during 1890s. Act 1 takes place in London, while Acts 2 and 3 are set in Hertfordshire, a rural county not far from London.

Protagonist

John Worthing is the protagonist of the play. He is known as “Ernest” by his friends in London and as “Jack” by his friends and relations in the country.

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.

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

Climax

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

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.

Foreshadowing

In stage comedy and domestic melodrama, foreshadowing often takes the form of objects, ideas, or plot points whose very existence in the play signals to the audience that they will come up again. The fact that Jack was adopted as a baby, for instance, predicates a recognition scene in which Jack’s true identity is revealed and the plot is resolved by means of some incredible coincidence. Miss Prism’s “three-volume novel” is another example: Her very mention of it ensures that it will be important later. An instance of foreshadowing that operates in the more usual way is Jack’s assertion that Cecily and Gwendolen will be “calling each other sister” within half an hour of having met, followed by Algernon’s that “[w]omen only do that when they have called each other a lot of other things first.” This is literally what happens between Cecily and Gwendolen in Act 2.