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The Importance of Reinventing Oscar : Versions of Wilde during the Last 100 Years

Boeker, Uwe(Volume editor)Corballis, Richard(Volume editor)Hibbard, Julie A.(Volume editor)
Part of the Internationale Forschungen zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Literaturwissenschaft series
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The present collection of essays is the outcome of the Oscar Wilde conference held at the Technical University of Dresden, 31 August - 3 September 2000.

The papers cover a wide range of historical and comparative aspects: they look into the status of Wilde as poet, dramatist, essayist and intellectual during his own times as well as investigate the meaning of his work for subsequent writers and critics, thus, giving an outline of the Wildean history of literary reception, intellectual discourse and media transformation.

Intellectually brilliant and challenging, Oscar Wilde had been a favourite of the late Victorians, performing the roles of the dandy and the poet of art for art's sake.

However, due to his questioning of prevalent moral double standards and his insistence on the autonomy of art, he was indicted for gross indecencies, convicted, and sent to prison.

Instead of being ostracised, he became a source of inspiration for writers and artists on the British isles as well as on the European continent. The papers in this volume explore such topics as Wilde's concepts of socialism and aestheticism, his fashioning of the femme fatale and of the dandy, his use of fashion and of simulation, his impact on modernism and postmodernism as well as on genres such as crime writing and fictional biography, and the influence of Wilde on writers such as James Joyce, W.B.

Yeats, Joe Orton, Peter Ackroyd, Tom Stoppard, David Hare and Mark Ravenhill.

Other papers focus on the reception of Wilde in Russia, former Yugoslavia, Hungary and Germany as well as on cinematic and Internet representations of Wilde.

Critical and creative responses vary from the general to the specific - from traditional assessments to analyses of the arts of camp, parody, and pastiche; thus, indicative of the (sub)cultural appropriation of 'Saint Oscar' (Terry Eagleton).

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£35.70
Product Details
Editions Rodopi B.V.
9042014008 / 9789042014008
Paperback / softback
828.8
01/01/2002
Netherlands
303 pages
170 x 240 mm, 518 grams
General (US: Trade)/Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More