Title: Oscar Wilde
1Oscar Wilde
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4Wilde trivia
- On a tour stop in Leadville, Colorado, Wilde saw
a sign on a saloon that said, Please do not
shoot the pianist. Hes doing his best. - Wilde said that was the only rational method of
art criticism that I have ever come across.
5Some Wilde Quotes
- True friends stab you in the front.
- We live in an age where unnecessary things are
our only necessities. - To believe is very dull. To doubt is intensely
engrossing . . .
6Some Quick Facts about Wilde
- Born in Dublin, Ireland
- Lived 1854-1900 (Victorian Era)
- Published only one novel
- Wrote 9 plays
- Regarded as one of the greatest playwrights of
the Victorian Era
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8At Home
- Wilde is born to Dublin celebrities
- Father was ear and eye surgeon
- Mother often called a snob
Grave Marker and Memorial in
9Sir William and Lady Jane Wildes Memorial,
Dublin.
Mount Jerome Cemetery, Dublin of Sir William
Wilde and his wife. Lady Wilde. Photographed by
Adam Quinan, August 2006.
10Wilde in Love
- Wilde falls in love with Florence Balcombe
- Florence accepts Bram Stokers
- marriage proposal
- Wilde moves to London
Bram Stoker
11Oscar Wilde's House, 34 Tite Street, Chelsea.
Photograph by Philip V. Allingham. 2002.
12On May 29, 1884, Oscar married Constance Lloyd.
They had two sons.
13- In the summer of 1891, Oscar met Lord Alfred
'Bosie' Douglas, the third son of the Marquis of
Queensberry.
14Robert Ross at 24
15- Algy My dear Aunt Augusta, I mean Bunbury is
dead. He was found out. - -- The Importance of Being Ernest
16The Aesthetic and Decadent Movements art for
arts sake
- Wears his hair long
- Openly mocks masculine sports
- Decorates his room with lilies, sunflowers, blue
china, peacock feathers - Publications report with skepticism
17On Wilde
- . . . Eclipses masculine ideals that under
such influence men would become effeminate
dandies. - - Thomas Wentworth Higginson, publisher and
critic of Wilde
18Keller cartoon from the Wasp of San Francisco
depicting Wilde on the occasion of his visit
there in 1882.
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20- In 1895 he was sent to the Reading Jail for two
years hard labor. - prison years were highly traumatic
- he never recovered, dying in 1900
- I had to stand on the center platform at Clapham
Junction in convict dress and handcuffed, for all
the word to look at . . . Of all possible objects
I was the most grotesque. When people saw me
they laughed.
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22The Jail
- Every prisoner was expected to walk six hours a
day on a treadmill in 29-minute - increments with five-minute breaks. The
- distance to be covered was the equivalent of a
6,000-foot incline. - Rules of the prison system -- utter silence at
all times. No books, pen, or paper. (Wilde was
later given permission to write.)
23- The small cells bed were wooden planks without
mattresses. - Visitors were allowed once every three months
for 20 minutes. Physical contact - was out of the question.
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25Two years after his release
- Wildes health never recovered after prison,
although he kept his wit until the end. During
his last days, he looked at the shabby wallpaper
in his room and quipped, One of us has to go.
26The Importance of Being Earnest
- A response to Victorian
- literature, melodrama
- - Dickens
- - Robert L. Stevenson
- - Bram Stoker
- - Bronte sisters
- - Brownings
27Some Common Victorian Themes
- Uncertain parentage (because class is everything
in Victorian England) - Mysterious letters
- Charles Dickens
- Dark secrets from the past threaten happiness of
respectable, well-meaning characters
28Wilde Expands and Ridicules the Genre
- The Dandy (Wilde himself)
- Serves as self-made philosopher
- Speaks in paradoxes, ridicules society
- Presents himself as shallow and trivial
- Turns out to be deeply moral and essential to
plot resolution
29Some Themes/Motifs Youll See
- Commentary on marriage
- The constraints of morality
- Hypocrisy
- Food/Gluttony
- The importance of NOT being earnest
- Death
30Works Cited Page
- Tarpening, William. The Picture of Oscar Wilde
A Brief Life. 6.18.07. ltwww.victorianweb.org/aut
hors/wilde/wildebio.htmlgt - Quote DB. Oscar Wilde. 6.19.07
lthttp//www.quotedb.com/authors/oscar-wildegt