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Oscar Wilde was a courageous individualist whose path-breaking life and work were shaped in the crucible of his time and place, deeply marked by the controversies of his era. This collection of concise and illuminating articles reveals the complex relationship between Wilde's work and ideas, and contemporary contexts including Victorian feminism, aestheticism and socialism. Chapters investigate how Wilde's writing was both a resistance to and quotation of Victorian master narratives and genre codes. From performance history to film and operatic adaptations, the ongoing influence and reception…mehr
Oscar Wilde was a courageous individualist whose path-breaking life and work were shaped in the crucible of his time and place, deeply marked by the controversies of his era. This collection of concise and illuminating articles reveals the complex relationship between Wilde's work and ideas, and contemporary contexts including Victorian feminism, aestheticism and socialism. Chapters investigate how Wilde's writing was both a resistance to and quotation of Victorian master narratives and genre codes. From performance history to film and operatic adaptations, the ongoing influence and reception of Wilde's story and work is explored, proposing not one but many Oscar Wildes. To approach the meaning of Wilde as an artist and historical figure, the book emphasises not only his ability to imagine new worlds, but also his bond to the turbulent cultural and historical landscape around him - the context within which his life and art took shape.
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Inhaltsangabe
Preface Chronology An appreciation: Oscar Wilde: the art of the somdomite Mark Ravenhill Part I. Placing Wilde: 1. Son and parents: Speranza and Sir William Wilde Sean Ryder 2. Wilde's Dublin Dublin's Wilde Jerusha McCormack 3. Oxford, Hellenism, male friendship Philip E. Smith, II 4. An aesthete in America Leon Litvak 5. Wilde's London Matt Cook 6. Wilde and Paris John Stokes Part II. Aesthetic and Critical Contexts: 7. Wilde's poetic traditions: from Aristophanes' Clouds to The Ballad of Reading Gaol Joseph Bristow 8. William Morris and the house beautiful Marcus Waithe 9. Wilde and British art Richard Dorment 10. Aubrey Beardsley and Salome Susan Owens 11. Between two worlds and beyond them: John Ruskin and Walter Pater John Paul Riquelme 12. Wilde, Henry James, and the fate of aestheticism Michèle Mendelssohn 13. Style at the fin de siècle: aestheticist, decadent, symbolist Ellis Hanson 14. Poisoned by a book: the lethal aura of The Picture of Dorian Gray Peter Raby 15. Rewriting farce Kerry Powell 16. Bernard Shaw and 'Hibernian drama' Anthony Roche 17. Wilde, the fairy tales, and the oral tradition Jarlath Killeen Part III. Cultural and Historical Contexts: Ideas, Iterations, Innovations: 18. Oscar Wilde's crime and punishment: fictions, facts, and questions Merlin Holland 19. Wilde and evolution David Clifford 20. Dandyism and late-Victorian masculinity James Eli Adams 21. Oscar Wilde and the New Woman Margaret D. Stetz 22. Wilde and socialism Josephine Guy 23. Wilde and Christ Jan-Melissa Schramm 24. Aestheticism Ruth Livesey 25. Journalism Mark W. Turner 26. Censorship of the stage: writing on the edge of the allowed Helen Freshwater 27. Feminism Barbara Caine 28. Wilde and the law H. G. Cocks Part IV. Reception and Afterlives: 29. Reception and performance history of The Importance of Being Earnest Joseph Donohue 30. Reception and performance history of Wilde's 'society plays' Sos Eltis 31. A short history of Salome Steven Price 32. Wilde and stage design: some deductions, appraisals and selected instances Richard Cave 33. Wilde life: Oscar on film Oliver S. Buckton 34. Wilde and performativity Lynn Voskuil 35. Wilde and his editors Russell Jackson 36. Wilde's texts, contexts and The Portrait of Mr W. H. Ian Small Further reading.
Preface Chronology An appreciation: Oscar Wilde: the art of the somdomite Mark Ravenhill Part I. Placing Wilde: 1. Son and parents: Speranza and Sir William Wilde Sean Ryder 2. Wilde's Dublin Dublin's Wilde Jerusha McCormack 3. Oxford, Hellenism, male friendship Philip E. Smith, II 4. An aesthete in America Leon Litvak 5. Wilde's London Matt Cook 6. Wilde and Paris John Stokes Part II. Aesthetic and Critical Contexts: 7. Wilde's poetic traditions: from Aristophanes' Clouds to The Ballad of Reading Gaol Joseph Bristow 8. William Morris and the house beautiful Marcus Waithe 9. Wilde and British art Richard Dorment 10. Aubrey Beardsley and Salome Susan Owens 11. Between two worlds and beyond them: John Ruskin and Walter Pater John Paul Riquelme 12. Wilde, Henry James, and the fate of aestheticism Michèle Mendelssohn 13. Style at the fin de siècle: aestheticist, decadent, symbolist Ellis Hanson 14. Poisoned by a book: the lethal aura of The Picture of Dorian Gray Peter Raby 15. Rewriting farce Kerry Powell 16. Bernard Shaw and 'Hibernian drama' Anthony Roche 17. Wilde, the fairy tales, and the oral tradition Jarlath Killeen Part III. Cultural and Historical Contexts: Ideas, Iterations, Innovations: 18. Oscar Wilde's crime and punishment: fictions, facts, and questions Merlin Holland 19. Wilde and evolution David Clifford 20. Dandyism and late-Victorian masculinity James Eli Adams 21. Oscar Wilde and the New Woman Margaret D. Stetz 22. Wilde and socialism Josephine Guy 23. Wilde and Christ Jan-Melissa Schramm 24. Aestheticism Ruth Livesey 25. Journalism Mark W. Turner 26. Censorship of the stage: writing on the edge of the allowed Helen Freshwater 27. Feminism Barbara Caine 28. Wilde and the law H. G. Cocks Part IV. Reception and Afterlives: 29. Reception and performance history of The Importance of Being Earnest Joseph Donohue 30. Reception and performance history of Wilde's 'society plays' Sos Eltis 31. A short history of Salome Steven Price 32. Wilde and stage design: some deductions, appraisals and selected instances Richard Cave 33. Wilde life: Oscar on film Oliver S. Buckton 34. Wilde and performativity Lynn Voskuil 35. Wilde and his editors Russell Jackson 36. Wilde's texts, contexts and The Portrait of Mr W. H. Ian Small Further reading.
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