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  2. In ‘The Necklace’, Guy de Maupassant explores the relationship between appearance and reality. The necklace, of course, is the most explicit example of this: it looks like a genuine diamond necklace but is actually an imitation or fake.

  3. The satire in the story is tied up with the irony. Although the necklace is much sought after by Madame Loisel, and for her represents everything she is missing out on in life, it ends up being...

  4. Summary. Analysis. Mathilde Loisel is a pretty and charming woman who was born, “as if through some blunder of fate,” into a middle-class family. Without a dowry or a point of entry into high society, she is unable to find a wealthy husband, and so she marries M. Loisel, a clerk who works for the Ministry of Education.

  5. Apr 16, 2012 · The fact that the necklace is a fake may or may not have some kind of moral meaning. You could take it to mean that wealth, or appearances more broadly, are false. Against the backdrop of wealth and appearance, we have the contrast of Mathilde's poverty.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › The_NecklaceThe Necklace - Wikipedia

    Because of her pride and obsession with wealth, Mathilde loses ten years of her life and spends all of her savings on replacing the necklace only to find out that the original necklace was a fake. While it is true the Madame Forestier is at fault, we also find that Mathilde's sin of vanity scarcely surpasses the trouble she had to go through to ...

    • France
    • 1884
  7. Ani McHugh. | Certified Educator. Share Cite. I don't see "The Necklace" as humorous or frightening. I think that many of the great tragedies (Greek tragedies, Shakespearean tragedies, etc.)...

  8. Quick answer: One of the central themes of "The Necklace" is appearance versus reality. For Mathilde, the necklace symbolizes wealth, beauty, and, shame, as she loses the necklace and goes into...

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