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Oscar Wilde

Part of the Writers and their work series
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This is a concise, critical study of the works of Oscar Wilde.

Since he first began publishing his work in the 1880s, Oscar Wilde has been a controversial figure.

Although celebrated by many of his contemporaries for his witty and iconoclastic writing, he was imprisoned and disgraced in 1895 and died in poverty and exile.

For much of the twentieth century, he was best known for his society comedies, but more recent scholarship has focused on his prose work and identified him as an important figure in such fields as Irish writing and queer theory.

This study looks at the whole range of Wilde's writing and places it in the context of later nineteenth century ideas, suggesting that the influence of his studies at Oxford was more profound than has been realized, and that modern philosophy and evolutionary theory had a lasting effect on his representations of the individual and society.

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£18.69
Product Details
Liverpool University Press
0746311397 / 9780746311394
Paperback / softback
828.809
30/11/2006
United Kingdom
English
128 p.
22 cm
advanced secondary /general /postgraduate /undergraduate Learn More