THE
OSCAR WILDE
              PICTUR
              E OF
              DORIAN
              GRAY
“When   Dorian Gray was first published in
Lippincott’s Monthly Magazine as a short
story, Victorian readers were shocked by the
morals of its title character and the story’s
scandalous homoerotic subtext. When the
story was published as a novel, Wilde added,
along with another six chapters, an equally
shocking preface that announced art had no
moral responsibility. Art, he argued, should
strive only to be a beautiful art object
entirely separate from its creator” (Muldoon
vii)
Is it really an immoral
 book?
   “it is almost impossible not to see a moral in
    Dorian Gray. Dorian, who lived life as though it
    were a work of art unconnected to the question of
    ethics, dies by his own hand. Basil, who puts too
    much of himself into his art, is murdered. People
    cannot exist separately from morality, as works of
    art can. Wilde himself admitted that his novel
    contained a moral, calling it the novel’s ‘only
    flaw’” (Muldoon vii-viii).
THE LIFE OF OSCAR WILDE
 He was born in Dublin in1854.
 His father was an eye and ear doctor, William
  Wilde.
 His mother was an Irish nationalist and a writer.
 He was a very successful student. He earned
  scholarships and took high honors at both Trinity
  College and Oxford.
 In Oxford, “he met his teacher and mentor,
  Walter Pater, and became an enthusiastic
  follower of the Aesthetic Movement, which Pater
  championed” (Muldoon viii)
THE LIFE OF
OSCAR WILDE
 “After graduating
 from Oxford in 1878,
 Wilde moved to
 London. He quickly
 gained notoriety for
 his sharp wit and
 flamboyant style of
 dress –he was
 especially famous for
 wearing a dyed-green
 carnation in his lapel”
 (Muldoon ix)
THE LIFE OF OSCAR WILDE
 Wilde married Costance Lloyd in 1884. They
  had two sons.
 Wilde had been married only two years when he
  met Robert Ross, who claimed to have initiated
  him into homosexuality.
 In 1891, the thirty-seven-year-old Wilde was
  captivated by the handsome, spoiled twenty-year-
  old playboy Lord Alfred “Bosie” Douglas and
  began the major affair of his life.
 Wilde’s relationship with Douglas infuriated
  Bosie’s father, the Marquess of Queensberry. He
  instituted proceedings against Wilde for
  homosexuality. (Muldoon ix)
THE LIFE OF OSCAR WILDE
 “Wilde stood two trials. The first ended without a
  verdict. At the end of the second trial he was
  convicted and sentenced to two yeas in prison.
  Because Queensberry forced him into
  bankruptcy, all his possessions were auctioned”
 “Though he was allowed only one sheet of paper
  at a time while in prison, Wilde managed to
  compose De Profundis, a chronicle of Wilde’s
  spiritual quest.”
 “During Wilde’s years in prison, his mother died
  and Constance moved abroad and took the name
  Holland for herself and their sons. After her
  death in 1898, Wilde was denied access to his
  sons” (Muldoon x)
THE LIFE OF
OSCAR WILDE
 Wilde moved to Paris
  and took the name
  Sebastian Melmoth.
 “He dies in a hotel
  room, either of
  syphilis or
  complications from an
  ear surgery, in Paris,
  on November 30,1900”
  (Muldoon xi)
HISTORICAL AND LITERARY CONTEXT
                              “So much change occurred during the
   The Victorian Era          tumultuous Victorian era that the
    “Victorianism” is          early, middle, and late Victorian
                               periods each has its own particular
    synonymous in many         characteristics. Wilde’s life and work
    people’s minds with        belong to the late Victorian era, a
    the elaborate,             period marked by both genteel country
    oppressive moral           house parties and growing political
                               unrest. The complicated tangle of
    codes instituted           political matters known as the “Irish
    under the genteel          Question” were particularly urgent”
    queen. Piety and          “In the face of such complex and
    family were exalted.       difficult questions, a number of writers,
    Sex, and anything          including Wilde’s teacher and friend,
                               Walter Pater, felt little could be
    that brought sex to        accomplished in the way of resolution.
    mind, was strictly         Instead, they turned to the idea that
    taboo, and gender          people should seek out and enjoy each
    roles were equally         fleeting moment of beauty the world
                               offered. (Muldoon xi)
    strictly enforced”
    (Muldoon xi)
HISTORICAL AND LITERARY CONTEXT
   Aestheticism
    “In his Studies in the History of the Renaissance,
    Walter Pater called for his readers to fan the “hard,
    gem-like flame” of self-fulfillment through a devotion
    to their senses. As Dorian Gray’s Lord Henry puts it,
    “Nothing can cure the soul but the senses, just as
    nothing can cure the senses but the soul” This was a
    radical idea in a culture devoted to suppressing
    sensuality.”
    “Aestheticists pushed harder against the Victorian
    tide by arguing that art’s role was not to be moral or
    useful, or to teach “lessons,” but to make art an object
    of beauty that transcend humans and human
    questions”
    They also believed that life should strive to emulate
    art and become as beautiful as possible and that, as
    Wilde puts it in Dorian Gray, “the search for beauty is
    the real secret of life” (Muldoon xii)
HISTORICAL AND LITERARY
CONTEXT
   Decadence
    “Aestheticism is sometimes thought of the English
    branch of the French decadence movement. One of
    the main tenets of French decadence was “art for art’s
    sake,” the idea that art did not need to have a purpose
    or moral. In fact, the decadents embraced the
    gruesome, immoral, and perverse aspects of life and
    championed them in art. The father of the decadence
    movement was Charles Baudelaire, whose 1857
    collection of poems, Les Fleurs du Mal (The Flowers of
    Evil), was so scandalous that Baudelaire, his
    publisher, and even his printer were founded guilty of
    blasphemy and obscenity” (Muldoon xii)
HISTORICAL AND LITERARY
CONTEXT
  The Yellow Book
 Joris Karl Huysmans was another key figure in
  the decadence movement.
 “His 1884 novel, A Rebours (Against the Grain),
  referred to as “the little yellow book,” was treated
  almost as a textbook for decadence.
 Wilde was profoundly influenced by A Rebours
  and refers to the yellow book in Dorian Gray.
 Other poets associated with the decadence
  movement include Arthur Rimbaud, Paul
  Verlaine and Stephane Mallarme.” (Muldoon xii)
THE YELLOW BOOK
   The protagonist of the novel A Rebours is the last
    member of a noble family. Because of his past
    decadent life in Paris, he stays away from human
    society and retreats to a house in the countryside.
    He decides to spend the rest of his life in
    aesthetic contemplation. He fills the house with
    art objects. He tries to invent perfumes, etc.
CHARACTERISTICS OF DECADENT
LITERATURE
   Narcisstic egotism
   Provocative scorn for moral and social conventions
   Preference for the artificial as opposed to natural
   Pleasure-seeking
   Experience for the sake of experience
   An atmosphere of decay
   The death-wish
   A retreat from everyday present into the luxurious
    artificial paradise of distant times and exotic places
(from the book Oscar Wilde: The Works of a Conformist
Rebel)
THEMES AND SYMBOLS
   THE PURSUIT OF BEAUTY AND BEAUTIFUL OBJECTS
   The characters in DG are all driven by their devotion to beauty, a devotion
    that often passes into obsession and a disregard for truth and
    consequences.
   Lord Henry, whose praise first flatters Dorian, later will not believe
    anything bad about Dorian because he still keeps his beauty.
   Basil’s passionate devotion to Dorian’s beauty produces the supernatural
    portrait that later becomes so monstrous.
   Dorian’s youthful beauty is sometimes referred to as though it were one
    more object to possess, like a beautiful painting, a jewel, or a flower. It is
    Dorian’s intense desire to hold on to his prized beauty and prompts his
    fateful wish.
THEMES AND SYMBOLS
   CLASSICAL BEAUTY AND HOMOSEXUALITY
   There are numerous references in Dorian Gray to classical figures known
    for their beauty and implicitly or explicitly tied to homosexuality: in
    particular, Adonis, Narcissus, and Antinous. All three of these figures
    are icons of young male beauty.
   The first two are figures from mythology. Adonis was a young man
    that the goddess of love herself fell in love with him, but he rejected her
    advances and was gored to death a male boar. Narcissus was a
    stunningly beautiful young man who cruelly rejected the female nymph
    who loved him and fell in love with his own image instead. He sat staring
    at his own beautiful reflection in a pool of water until he starved to death.
   Antinous was a figure from ancient history. He was a beautiful
    young man deeply loved by the Roman Emperor Hadrian. After he
    drowned under mysterious circumstances in AD 130, Hadrian raised a
    city dedicated to him on the ruins near the river where he drowned and
    ordered sculptures of his image to be placed throughout the empire.
THEMES AND SYMBOLS
 DOUBLING
 Dorian is a man split in two: himself and his
  portrait, each a reflection of the other. The
  portrait has become his “other self,” so separate
  that Dorian comes to hate the portrait.
 Basil Hallward experiences a kind of doubling
  with the portrait, too. He puts too much of
  himself on the portrait.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
 Kohl, Norbert. Oscar Wilde: The Works of a
  Conformist Rebel. Cambridge UP. 1989.
 Muldoon, Moira. “Introduction.” in The Picture of
      Dorian Gray and Other Writings by Oscar
      Wilde. Pocket Books: New York, 2005.
 Wilde, Oscar. The Picture of Dorian Gray . Oxford
      University Press: New York, 2006.
 The pictures in the presentation were taken from
  the following websites:
 https://thevoiceoffashion.com/intersections/famou
  s-wardrobes-then-and-now/oscar-wilde-of-dress-
  shirts-and-dentures-3541
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Tomb_of_Oscar
  _Wilde,_P%C3%A8re_Lachaise_cemetery,_Paris,_
  France.jpg