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Explores the influence of contemporary radicalism over Oscar Wilde
- Offers a new, politicised interpretation of Wilde's most famous literary works
- Contextualises Wilde's writing by reading it against the contemporary political crises that it addressed
- Focuses on archival research, drawing on Wilde's correspondence, reviews, interviews, unpublished lectures and speeches
- Provides a theoretical approach to Wilde's subversive opinions on the problems posed by capitalism, property and empire, and how he consistently opposed the authority of the state in bourgeois-imperial Britain
- Clarifies the relationship between Wilde's aestheticism, his anticolonial beliefs and his support for anarchism
This book reads Oscar Wilde's literary texts in relation to his open support for revolutionaries, along with his expressions of solidarity with Irish republicans, anarchists, workers and migrants. Framing Wilde's literary writing in relation to his very active participation in the radical political culture of the fin de siècle, Ó Donghaile argues that, contrary to contemporary representations of Wilde as an effete and socially disengaged figure, his aesthetical radicalism was informed by and contributed to a broader set of progressive political initiatives being pursued at the end of the nineteenth century.
Consisting of previously unpublished material, the book provides a politicised and historicised account of Wilde's key works by situating them within the framework of his very pronounced ideological commitment to these radical political causes.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Series Editor's Preface; Acknowledgments; Introduction: Wilde and Politics; 1. Anticolonial Wilde; 2. Coercion and Resistance: Vera ... or the Land War; 3. Class, Criticism, and Culture: 'The Soul of Man Under Socialism'; 4. Fairy Tales for Revolutionaries; 5. The Politics of Art and The Picture of Dorian Gray; 6. Civil Disobedience and The Importance of Being Earnest; 7. 'De Profundis', 'The Ballad of Reading Gaol' and the Politics of Imprisonment; 8. Oscar Wilde - The Lost Revolutionary?; Bibliography; Index.
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Deaglán Ó Donghaile is Senior Lecturer in English Literature at Liverpool John Moores University. His first book, Blasted Literature: Victorian Political Fiction and the Shock of Modernism was published by EUP in 2011. His research focuses on the relationship between literature, political culture and violence in late nineteenth and early twentieth century writing.
Zusammenfassung
This book reads Oscar Wilde’s literary texts in relation to his open support for revolutionaries, along with his expressions of solidarity with Irish republicans, anarchists, workers and migrants.