Logo for Pressbooks

Want to create or adapt books like this? Learn more about how Pressbooks supports open publishing practices.

24 Hedonism, Aestheticism, and Homoeroticism in The Picture of Dorian Gra – Athena Yasbeck

Athena Yasbeck is a Technical and Professional Writing major at IU East. She grew up in Franklin, Ohio.  This essay was written as her final paper for her Introduction to Victorian Literature course in the spring of 2022.Professor Alisa Clapp-Itnyre would like to celebrate this piece and said, “Wow, Athena really surprised and impressed me with this last paper on Oscar Wilde! I was very proud of her work with it.”

Hedonism, Aestheticism, and Homoeroticism in The Picture of Dorian Gray

Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray has been interpreted as homoerotic by many readers since its publication in 1891, but without any sort of explicitly homoerotic content, this is a subtextual understanding. Hedonism and aestheticism, two other major elements of the novel, contribute to the subtext employed by Wilde to evoke homoerotic connotations in The Picture of Dorian Gray . Utilizing the work of Joseph Carroll and Luljeta Muriqi, this paper will substantiate the interpretation of the novel as homoerotic and argue that the themes of hedonism, aestheticism, and homoeroticism in The Picture of Dorian Gray inform each other in an inextricable manner, to the extent that hedonism and aestheticism become a shorthand for homoeroticism under Wilde.

During the titular Dorian Gray’s first meeting with Lord Henry Wotton, he describes being stirred by Lord Henry’s words, “entirely fresh influences… at work within him” that really came from within Dorian himself; this could mean something that he perhaps already knew, but was not cognizant of until meeting Lord Henry (Wilde 21). Continuing what seems to be a kind of extended metaphor for Dorian’s attraction to Lord Henry and realization of his own homosexuality, the narrator states that Lord Henry’s words “had touched some secret chord that had never been touched before, but that [Dorian] felt was now vibrating and throbbing to curious pulses” (Wilde 21). The usage of these specific words to depict Lord Henry’s effect on Dorian evokes the discovery and intimacy of a sexual awakening. It is extended further as a metaphor as Dorian realizes that he now understands some things that he did not know how to interpret as a child (Wilde 22). He also realizes that he had been “walking in fire” without knowing it, which could allude to someone being in danger without knowing it, such as the danger that gay men faced as marginalized and oppressed members of Victorian society (Wilde 22). Fire could also refer to sexual attraction or desire, as life has also become “fiery-coloured” to Dorian now, suggesting that he could have been “walking in” the path of latent desire his whole life, but now, his eyes have been opened to it (Wilde 22). This is one example of subtext that contributes to many readers’ interpretation of The Picture of Dorian Gray and the relationships between its male characters as homoerotic.

In the essay, “Aestheticism, Homoeroticism, and Christian Guilt in The Picture of Dorian Gray: A Darwinian Critique” by Joseph Carroll, Walter Pater is referenced as one main influence of Wilde’s work in The Picture of Dorian Gray . The major perpetuator of Pater’s ideology throughout the novel is the character Lord Henry, a friend of Basil Hallward’s who takes an interest in Dorian Gray. Lord Henry’s personal ideology is first introduced in part in Chapter I; according to the omniscient narrator, other people’s emotions are much more delightful to Lord Henry than their ideas (Wilde 15). Throughout the novel, it is clear that he values anything that is “delightful” to him over intelligence, kindness, honesty, etc., along with everything else. Here, Lord Henry does not see the validity in being passionate about helping feed the poor, for example, and suggests that other such topics expected to be discussed at his aunt’s luncheon would be equally empty of meaning; as the narrator states, “The rich would have spoken on the value of thrift, and the idle grown eloquent over the dignity of labour” (Wilde 16). Although it may seem that he is simply wholly uninterested in helping others, as a byproduct of the ideology of hedonism, Lord Henry seems frustrated on some level with the self-righteousness and hypocrisy of unqualified people speaking on topics about which they know nothing. This resentment that he feels towards this hypocrisy reflects the views about homosexuality at the time the novel was written, in that those speaking about whether homosexuality was acceptable behavior and labeling it as perverted or deviant at the time did not have the perspective necessary to develop valuable insight into this matter. One who has not dealt with homosexuality personally or who lacks the capacity to consider the matter with empathy will typically have less valuable wisdom regarding how homosexuality should be treated within a given community, and as such, resembles the qualities of a rich man attempting to educate others on the importance of living a modest and frugal life. This could be one area from which Lord Henry’s cynicism stems.

In Chapter II, Lord Henry tells Dorian that Dorian only has “a few years in which to live really, perfectly, and fully” and urges him to take advantage of these years to “[b]e always searching for new sensations… afraid of nothing” (Wilde 25). This advice, along with the sexual immorality exemplified by Dorian later in the novel, mirrors the reality of the homosexual lifestyle in times before homosexuality, and eventually same-sex marriage, started to become legal. Even many years after the publication of The Picture of Dorian Gray , many gay men, among others, lost their lives in the 1980s and 1990s after being exposed to AIDS many times due to unsafe sex practices that were common because, due to the stigma surrounding homosexuality, monogamous gay relationships were viewed as a less viable option than sexual encounters with many different people. This is just one example that illustrates the danger present in homoerotic behavior, which Lord Henry advises Dorian to ignore—and he later does, partaking in numerous sexual encounters with numerous people in a way that reflects the sexual lifestyle that has been viewed as common for gay men throughout history. As Carroll highlights, Lord Henry’s explanation of the purpose of life as being to “realize one’s nature perfectly” closely follows Walter Pater’s concept of hedonism (Carroll 8). This definition of the purpose of life, which is specifically applied to Lord Henry and Dorian’s lives, suggests that they are realizing their nature perfectly through excessive sexual immorality and never maintaining a lasting romantic relationship with anyone else or participating in the institution of marriage. Carroll makes reference to Donald Symons, who concludes that “male homosexual behavior is characterized by promiscuous, impersonal sex” (Carroll 9). Hedonism, as portrayed in the novel is, in this way, shorthand for the outdated idea that gay men are bound by some inherent inability to be able to commit to a monogamous relationship.

Another facet of this part of Lord Henry’s hedonistic way of thinking is the rejection of monogamy and the institution of marriage. After Dorian rejects his former lover, Sybil Vane, and she commits suicide, Lord Henry tells Dorian that he is relieved that Dorian is no longer in a relationship with Sybil and seeking to marry her, because it would have been “an absolute failure” (Wilde 97). Lord Henry’s disdain for marriage is an allusion to the uselessness of marriage for gay men in this time period—he views attempting married life as an abject failure because for him or for Dorian, as gay men, it is futile. Similarly, Lord Henry views forming a romantic relationship with a woman as futile, reasoning that any woman will bore Dorian to the point that he will no longer have a zeal for life, and makes it sound inevitable that any woman Dorian might become involved with would eventually realize that he had no real interest in her (Wilde 97). Here, the hedonistic view that devoting too much time to one person is wasting life’s potential to keep on exploring new sensations also aligns with Symons’s aforementioned characterization of male homosexual behavior.

Luljeta Muriqi suggests in the essay “Homoerotic Codes in The Picture of Dorian Gray” that the value of the beauty of objects promoted by aestheticism translates to Wilde’s novel as the male characters viewing each other as objects of beauty (Muriqi 4). Aestheticism is closely associated with homoeroticism throughout the entirety of the novel, as Dorian’s physical beauty illustrates, being the quality that invited and sustained Basil and Lord Henry’s fixation on him. Lord Henry refers to Dorian as “some brainless, beautiful creature, who should always be here in winter when we have no flowers to look at” when speaking with Basil, which serves as a summation of the extent to which he views Dorian as an object to keep around only to admire and delight in its beauty (Wilde 7). This is a major element of aestheticism, which values beauty above all else.

Throughout Basil’s discussion with Lord Henry in Chapter I, he seems to use the appreciation of beauty—in this case, his fascination with Dorian Gray as a beautiful subject for his paintings—as a means to disguise and/or justify his attraction to Dorian. Muriqi asserts that it is Wilde himself “trying to explain away Basil’s feelings for Dorian in terms of aestheticism” (6) and also makes the observation that homoeroticism is closely connected with “[s]hallowness and superficiality” (5). We can see superficiality in Basil’s obsession with Dorian as a subject for painting and Lord Henry’s coveting of Dorian as an object of extreme beauty and his disregard for love, devotion, or altruism. Lord Henry also makes it clear when he urges Dorian to make the most of his youth that he would no longer see any value in Dorian after he ages and begins to lose his youthful beauty, showing us that he does not value him as a person, but an object (Wilde 24-25). Each of these expressions of superficiality are facilitated by the observance of Dorian Gray’s beauty by his two male friends. He is described by them throughout the novel in terms that carry an air of sensuality, and in some cases, a subtextual sexual or romantic attraction.

The Picture of Dorian Gray communicates a subtextual story of homoerotic experiences that are unique to gay people. These experiences are connected to the themes of hedonism and aestheticism that are also woven into Wilde’s writing. Lord Henry echoes Walter Pater’s principles of hedonism, which Wilde uses to reflect the concept of homosexuality as an inherent desire for promiscuity and lack of emotional attachment. Lord Henry’s thoughts about marriage also likely reflect the attitude of many gay men in the Victorian era who could not get married or who married women but were ultimately unsatisfied in the arrangement. In these ways, the elements of hedonism in the novel signal homoerotic subtext. Aestheticism is also a powerful theme repeated in assessments of Dorian Gray made by Lord Henry and Basil that objectify him, only valuing his beauty and basing their value of him on their level of attraction to him. Aestheticism also signals homoerotic subtext many times in the novel.

Works Cited

Carroll, Joseph A. “Aestheticism, Homoeroticism, and Christian Guilt in The Picture of Dorian Gray. ”  Philosophy and Literature  29, 2005.

Muriqi, Luljeta. “Homoerotic Codes in The Picture of Dorian Gray .” Lund University, 2007.

Wilde, Oscar. The Picture of Dorian Gray . Penguin Books, 2003.

Celebration of Student Writing 2023 Copyright © by Kelly Blewett and Kristie Marcum. All Rights Reserved.

Share This Book

Le portail en langues étrangères

logo

  • Photographie
  • Littérature américaine
  • Littérature britannique et irlandaise
  • Littérature postcoloniale
  • Entretiens et Textes inédits
  • Les dossiers transversaux
  • Domaine américain
  • Domaine britannique
  • Commonwealth
  • L'essentiel de l'anglais oral
  • Phonologie et Phonétique
  • Linguistique
  • Stylistique
  • Précis de grammaire
  • Programmes d'enseignement et sélection de ressources
  • Programmes des concours
  • Porte-clés grammatical
  • Méthodologie
  • Les ressources web
  • Qui sommes-nous ?
  • Contribuer au site
  • Lettre d'information
  • Mentions légales

Aller au contenu. | Aller à la navigation

Outils personnels

Aestheticism and Morality in Oscar Wilde’s « The Picture of Dorian Gray» (1890)

aestheticism in dorian gray essay

Cet article a été rédigé dans le cadre d'un stage à l'ENS de Lyon.

Introduction

When  The Picture of Dorian Gray  was first published in  Lippincott’s Monthly Magazine  in July 1890, it was decried as profoundly immoral even though some passages had already been censored by the publisher. One critic wrote for instance in the  Daily Chronicle  that it was “a tale spawned from the leprous literature of the French  Décadents  – a poisonous book”, and denounced “its effeminate frivolity” and “its theatrical cynicism”  (([Anonymous], Review of  The Picture of Dorian Gray ,  Daily Chronicle , 30 June 1890, 7, repr. in Beckson (ed.),  Critical Heritage , 72. It is worth mentioning that the book was used as a piece of evidence of Oscar Wilde’s “gross indecency” during his trials in 1895.)) . Such attacks led to the publication of a revised edition in 1891, with six additional chapters and a preface in which Wilde rejected the attribution of moral values to works of art and literature , famously asserting that “There is no such thing as a moral or an immoral book. Books are well written or badly written – that is all”. In a playfully provocative tone,  The Picture of Dorian Gray  explores the depths of human conscience and problematises literature’s influence upon the reader within a highly moralistic society.

1. A Gothic narrative of duplicity and transgression

Although not always categorised as such, The Picture of Dorian Gray is distinctively set in the tradition of the Gothic novel . Wilde’s Faustian tale of a man who sacrifices his soul for eternal youth and a life of pleasures features one of the genre’s essential themes: the violation of natural and moral laws, through which society’s deepest anxieties are represented. The “magical” painting in particular introduces a supernatural dimension which typically challenges the intelligibility of the world depicted and unsettles defined boundaries . As the portrait acquires “a life of its own” (113), the dichotomy between art and life is blurred, as well as the one between appearances and reality; the picture acts as a reversed mirror, reflecting Dorian’s true inner self (or soul) whereas he, “the original” Dorian (28), only shows the deceitful mask of youth and purity. This duplicity is revelatory of a chiaroscuro aesthetic which is reminiscent of Robert Louis Stevenson’s Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886) and creates a dark atmosphere. The personality split is however deeply aestheticised here, and partially transferred to a material object, the painting.

If, as Kelly Hurley declared, “Gothic provided a space to explore phenomena at the borders of human identity and culture—insanity, criminality, barbarity, sexual perversion”  ((Kelly Hurley, The Gothic Body: Sexuality, Materialism, and Degeneration at the Fin de Siècle (Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1996), 6.)) , Wilde’s novel is exemplary of the fin-de-siècle modern treatment of such themes. By the end of the nineteenth century, new scientific progresses and the emergence of concepts such as degeneration  ((Degeneration was a very influential concept in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries which linked social behaviours with biological and hereditary features. Degenerationists feared the progressive decline of civilisation due to biological changes, and the concept of degeneration was used by ethnic nationalists to support eugenic theories and the marginalisation of individuals who were believed to be genetically inferior.)) ,  challenged the Victorian faith in rationality, and greatly encouraged writers to create characters who stretched the limits of science and humanity. Thus, the original sublime landscapes and fearful bandits of Horace Walpole’s Castle of Otranto (1764) or Ann Radcliffe’s The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794) gave way to the mad scientists and monstrous creations of Stevenson’s novel or Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818), another major Gothic reference which comes to mind when reading Wilde’s novel. As in Shelley’s narrative, Dorian Gray is in a sense the object of Lord Henry Wollon’s experiment. The latter takes a perverse pleasure in observing the effects of his influence upon the young man, seeing in him “an interesting study” and the product of “his own creation” (55). As the narrator outlines: “he had begun by vivisecting himself, as he had ended vivisecting others” (55). Henry is thus described as Victor Frankenstein’s alter ego, the creator of a destructive avatar who will eventually escape his control.  

In The Picture of Dorian Gray , the transgression of ethical and natural laws serves to demonstrate the limits of bourgeois values of respectability and integrity , in accordance with Wilde’s anti-authoritarian ideas. For in the novel, what is terrifying is not the behaviour of a Caliban-like foreigner (the mention of Shakespeare’s character in the Preface is in that sense significant), but the sinful attitude of an Englishman,  Dorian. In other words, the monstrous comes from within British society itself and from within culture (Basil’s art). In this modern tale of moral degradation taking place in “the native land of the hypocrites” (147), the Irish writer seems to point out the potential drifts of the ennui and indolence pervading the advanced civilisation that British aristocracy embodies.

2. A novel of self-development breaking up with Victorian traditions

Traditional Victorian society believed in the ethical role of literature, which was supposed to provide models of behaviour for the readers through the depiction of a character’s itinerary towards virtuous self-accomplishment. In this respect, The Picture of Dorian Gray is a dark rewriting of the traditional Bildungsroman , as it narrates the psychological and moral growth of the main character. “You have not realised how I have developed. I was a schoolboy when you knew me. I am a man now” (107), Dorian states to Basil, highlighting his own maturation. The beginning of the novel stages Dorian’s realisation of his own seductive potential and his progressive transformation into an image (quite literally), or rather, as it is repeatedly mentioned later on, an artistic ideal of beauty and purity.

The awakening of the innocent Dorian to life and its pleasures (and to homosexuality as some critics have suggested in comparison with Wilde’s personal life) is framed by the twin influences of Basil and Henry. These two characters act as embodiments of opposite pressures forging Dorian’s personality: Basil on the one hand is the optimistic, emotional and religious artist who trusts that the universe is guided by a moral code, whereas Henry more cynically advocates individualism and hedonism, and believes that morality is only arbitrary and relative. Torn between these two antithetical perspectives on human experience, Dorian Gray stands for humanity and embodies the moral issues faced by the nineteenth century as the rise of paganism and hedonism challenged Victorian values of puritanism and stoicism. The same conflict is dramatised in the novels of Henry James, Thomas Hardy, Emily Brontë, Nathaniel Hawthorne, William Thackeray, Herman Melville or George Eliot, in which the protagonist’s purpose is to reconcile such antagonisms, and to find a stable middle-ground harmoniously reuniting heart and mind, desire and duty.

But unlike such novels where moral order is ultimately restored once the villains are punished and virtue triumphs, The Picture of Dorian Gray does not allow for such resolution and Dorian’s preference for Henry’s system of beliefs culminates in the murder of Basil. Furthermore, the novel ends on Dorian’s self-destruction, far from the traditional marriage epitomising personal fulfilment in nineteenth-century narratives. Basil’s unsuccessful attempts to redeem Dorian signal the failure of Victorian morality itself and of its attempts to instrumentalise literature and art for educational purposes . The novel turns into an illustration of the consequences of its downfall, and as such foreshadows pre-WWI novels like Thomas Hardy’s Jude the Obscure (1895) or Edith Wharton’s Ethan Frome (1911) which depict a world where cosmic moral justice no  longer rules and characters are left to fend for themselves, struggling with their excesses and obsessions.

3. A manifesto of Wilde’s Aestheticism and its limits

More than a dark tale of supernatural immortality, The Picture of Dorian Gray is an illustration of Wilde’s aesthetic philosophy, known as Aestheticism. This intellectual and artistic movement became popular in Victorian England under the influence of the writer Walter Pater, in reaction against the new models brought by the industrial revolution which valued performativity and utility over aesthetic pleasure. Close to Theophile Gautier’s Art for Art’s sake credo, Aestheticism asserts the necessity for Art to emancipate itself from educational purposes and moral significance: “the sphere of Art and the sphere of Ethics are absolutely distinct and separate”, Wilde declares in The Critic as Artist  ((Oscar Wilde, “The Critic as Artist”, The Complete Works of Oscar Wilde (London: Collins, 1966), 1048.)) . Similar statements are made in the Preface of the novel (“The Artist is the creator of beautiful things”, “No artist desires to prove anything”), and within the narrative by Lord Henry: “Beauty is a form of Genius – is higher indeed, than Genius, as it needs no explanation”, as he reveals to Dorian in their decisive first encounter (20).

Such beliefs, provokingly uttered by Lord Henry and put into practice by Dorian, led many critics to see in the novel a profoundly immoral narrative, whereas others have argued that it could be read on the contrary as a cautionary tale warning against the dangers of excess and vice, given that the protagonist eventually dies  ((Accusations of immorality came mostly from contemporary critics, from journals like the Daily Chronicle , or the conservative Scots Observer edited by the poet W.E. Henley. More recent studies have highlighted the moral ambiguity of the novel: Philip K. Cohen argues that Wilde is “at moral odds with himself” and that the novel, as a result, is characterized by “narrative schizophrenia” ( The Moral Vision of Oscar Wilde [Rutherford, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson Univ. Press, 1978], 117-20). See also Gerald Weales (“Foreword,” The Picture of Dorian Gray and Selected Stories [New York: New American Library, 1962]), and Kerry Powell  (“Oscar Wilde ‘Acting’: The Medium as Message in The Picture of Dorian Gray,” Dalhousie Review 58 [1978]: 106) who dwells on the author’s “unresolved confusion”.)) .  The Preface would tend to suggest however that the novel’s ambition is beyond this controversy, and that t he book has no moral aim since it does not offer any clear conclusion, but rather provides philosophical observations on the human condition. Wilde proposes a profound meditation on the role of the artist , through the character of Basil whose depth has been reassessed in recent studies  ((See for instance Houston Baker, “A Tragedy of the Artist: The Picture of Dorian Gray. ”  Nineteenth-Century Fiction  24, no. 3 (1969): 349-55.)) and in whomWilde recognised himself: “Basil Hallward is what I think I am: Lord Henry what the world thinks me: Dorian what I would like to be—in other ages, perhaps”, the author famously wrote in a letter of 12 February 1894  (( Selected Letters of Oscar Wilde , ed. Rupert Hart-Davis (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1979), 116.)) .In that perspective, The Picture of Dorian Gray could be read as the tragic downfall of an artist who corrupted his artistic ideal ( Dorian) by mistaking his art for idolatry: “I worshipped you”, Basil confesses to the young man (2). Indeed, the role played by the painter in Dorian’s descent into moral degradation is not to be belittled: it is his picture which revealed to Dorian that he was worthy ofbeing admired and glorified. The novel thus ends on the destruction of the perverted artistic ideal embodied by the painting, the only way for art to return to its pure state. Wilde does not promote hedonistic instinct (embodied by Lord Henry) over conscience (represented by Basil) – nor the contrary, but rather suggests the necessity for both to unite. Indeed, Dorian’s confession to Basil (“Of course, I am very fond of Harry. But I know that you are better than he is. You are not stronger—you are too much afraid of life—but you are better”, 107) suggests that if Basil had possessed Henry’s strength and individualism, he might not have invested so much in the portrait and his encounter with Dorian might not have turned so tragically. Thus, according to Richard Ellmann, the novel represents “the tragedy of aestheticism” and “the aesthetic novel par excellence, not in espousing the doctrine, but in exhibiting its dangers”  ((Richard Ellmann, Oscar Wilde (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1987), 297.)) .

Commented excerpt: Narcissus’s tragedy

In this passage, Dorian has just broken up with the actress Sybil Vane whom he had courted and intended to marry. Coming back home, he realises for the first time that the portrait has altered and rapidly links it to the cruel and selfish way in which he treated her:

As he was turning the handle of the door, his eye fell upon the portrait Basil Hallward had painted of him. He started back as if in surprise […] In the dim arrested light that struggled through the cream-coloured silk blinds, the face appeared to him to be a little changed. The expression looked different. One would have said that there was a touch of cruelty in the mouth. It was certainly strange. He turned round and, walking to the window, drew up the blind. The bright dawn flooded the room and swept the fantastic shadows into dusky corners, where they lay shuddering. But the strange expression that he had noticed in the face of the portrait seemed to linger there, to be more intensified even. The quivering ardent sunlight showed him the lines of cruelty round the mouth as clearly as if he had been looking into a mirror after he had done some dreadful thing. He winced and, taking up from the table an oval glass framed in ivory Cupids, one of Lord Henry's many presents to him, glanced hurriedly into its polished depths. No line like that warped his red lips. What did it mean?  (87)

Dorian is here confronted with the direct and visible consequences of his behaviour as the portrait begins to bear the marks of corruption. The impossibility to identify himself completely with the painting, because of the expression of the mouth, inevitably reminds us of the myth of Narcissus who also failed to recognise his own image in the water. The same dissociation is at work, further highlighted by the presence of the mirror (significantly Lord Henry’s gift) which creates yet another double. This complex dynamic of duplication, or rather duplicity (in the moral sense) which led to Narcissus’s disappointment, announces more tragically Dorian’s downfall.

Wilde’s talent for combining elements of both fantastic and realistic narratives produces a “strange” text, where the personification of the painting (which comes to life) seems to contaminate the description: the shadows “shudder”, and the sunlight is “quivering” while the cruel expression “lingers”. His evocative and rich, ornate style builds up a chiaroscuro aesthetic which pervades the description through the contrast of lights and shadows, as if to better underline Dorian’s own psychological duality. The same precise and symbolic use of vocabulary which characterises Wilde’s writing can be seen in the expression “fantastic shadows”, which is also mentioned at the very beginning of the novel in the metaphorical description of flowers whose beauty is a “burden” (1), and later on again right before Dorian murders Basil (151). The scenes thus echo one another, ominous signs structuring the novel to highlight Dorian’s progression from innocence to monstrous self-destruction.

Bibliography

BAKER, Houston. “A Tragedy Of The Artist: The Picture of Dorian Gray .” Nineteenth-Century Fiction 24, no. 3 (1969): 349-355. www.jstor.org/stable/2932864 .

CARROLL, Joseph. “Aestheticism, Homoeroticism, and Christian Guilt in The Picture of Dorian Gray .” Philosophy and Literature 29, no. 2 (2005): 286-304. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/189431 .

CLAUSSON, Nils. “‘Culture and Corruption’: Paterian Self-Development versus Gothic Degeneration in Oscar Wilde's “The Picture of Dorian Gray”.” Papers on Language and Literature 39, no. 4 (2016): 339-64. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/283516983_'Culture_and_Corruption'_Paterian_Self-Development_versus_Gothic_Degeneration_in_Oscar_Wilde's_'The_Picture_of_Dorian_Gray '.

CRAFT, Christopher. “Come See About Me: Enchantment of the Double in The Picture of Dorian Gray .” Representations 91, no.1 (2005): 109–136. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/rep.2005.91.1.109 .

DUGGAN, Patrick. “The Conflict Between Aestheticism and Morality in Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray .” Boston University Art & Sciences Writing Program , Journal, Issue 1, http://www.bu.edu/writingprogram/journal/past-issues/issue-1/duggan/ .

LIEBMAN, Sheldon W. “Character Design in The Picture Of Dorian Gray .” Studies in the Novel 31, no. 3 (1999): 296-316. www.jstor.org/stable/29533343 .

LORANG, Elizabeth. “ The Picture of Dorian Gray in Context: Intertextuality and ‘Lippincott's Monthly Magazine.’” Victorian Periodicals Review 43, no. 1 (2010): 19-41.   www.jstor.org/stable/25732085 .

MANGANIELLO, Dominic. “Ethics and Aesthetics in The Picture of Dorian Gray .” The Canadian Journal of Irish Studies 9, no. 2 (1983): 25-33. www.jstor.org/stable/25512571 .

MATSUOKA, Mitsuharu. “Aestheticism and Social Anxiety in The Picture of Dorian Gray. ” Journal of Aesthetic Education 29 (2003): 77-100. https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/1a8a/d0fbef9c91942218b1472748cc9fbc7fbb48.pdf .

OATES, Joyce Carol. “ The Picture of Dorian Gray : Wilde's Parable of the Fall.” Critical Inquiry 7, no. 2 (1980): 419-428. www.jstor.org/stable/1343135 .

RIQUELME, John Paul. “Oscar Wilde’s Aesthetic Gothic: Walter Pater, Dark Enlightenment, and The Picture of Dorian Gray .” Modern Fiction Studies 46, no. 3 (2000): 609-631. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/21511 .

WILDE, Oscar.  The Picture of Dorian Gray.  London: Harper Collins, 2010 [based on the 1891 book edition].

Pour citer cette ressource :

Louise Bailly , Aestheticism and Morality in Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890) , La Clé des Langues [en ligne], Lyon, ENS de LYON/DGESCO (ISSN 2107-7029), septembre 2020 . Consulté le 19/11/2024 . URL: https://cle.ens-lyon.fr/anglais/litterature/litterature-britannique/aestheticism-and-morality-in-the-picture-of-dorian-gray

" ", La Clé des Langues [en ligne], Lyon, ENS de LYON/DGESCO (ISSN 2107-7029) . Consulté le . URL:

  • époque victorienne
  • Victorian era

aestheticism in dorian gray essay

  • La clé des langues
  • Lettre d'info
  • Réseaux sociaux
  • Plan du site
  • Accessibilité : non conforme
  • Se connecter

IMAGES

  1. Aestheticism In Dorian Gray Free Essay Example

    aestheticism in dorian gray essay

  2. The Nature of Aestheticism in The Picture of Dorian Gray Essay

    aestheticism in dorian gray essay

  3. Dorian Gray And The Theme Of Beauty Analysis Essay Example

    aestheticism in dorian gray essay

  4. PPT

    aestheticism in dorian gray essay

  5. The Picture Of Dorian Gray Essay

    aestheticism in dorian gray essay

  6. PPT

    aestheticism in dorian gray essay