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    Oscar Wilde's Dorian Gray

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    Oscar Wilde’s Picture of Dorian Gray received immediate criticism when it was published in 1890‚ being described as contaminated‚ unclean‚ and nauseous. The criticism stemmed from the challenges that were made by Oscar Wilde regarding Victorian morality. The novel was written in the aesthetic era‚ an era where authors attempted to reverse the role of art‚ to have no purpose besides being beautiful. Critics of the novel did not like this idea‚ fearing that it would corrupt readers‚ specifically their

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    Dorian Gray Essay

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    In the novel‚ “The Picture of Dorian Gray” by Oscar Wilde is about a young‚ naïve man who corrupted by a hedonistic aristocrat named Lord Henry Wotton. Dorian Gray get corrupted by Lord Henry by being introduced to the hedonistic lifestyle which includes drinking‚ drugs‚ and having many sexual relationships with numerous women. This lifestyle changes Dorian’s life quickly and affects his friends such as Basil Hallward‚ Sybil Vane‚ and even an old friend Alan Campbell. At one point in the story

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    Wilde’s novel The Picture of Dorian Gray is just the sort of book that made Victorian England shiver. This decadent masterpiece is anything but a vehicle for the propagation of middle-class morality. We have in Wilde the ultimate aesthete‚ a disciple of Walter Pater‚ a dandy who in his personal life seems to have lived out Pater’s quiet injunction to "burn with that hard‚ gemlike flame" in experiencing art and‚ no doubt‚ other things. How could Wilde’s book‚ given its affinities with the age’s decadent

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    Both Oscar Wilde and Henry Ibsen hurled criticism at the ‘modal woman’‚ the Victorian convention of females. Both writer’s work occurring at a period when Great Britain were threatening to conquer the world‚ with colonisation of other civilisations. While males enjoyed the world’s freedom‚ Women were moulded into a cast‚ which all females were expected to fit. ‘The Angel of the House’ was anticipated to flutter around the house‚ cleaning‚ cooking and serving the dominant Male and Children. The Female

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    Amanda Boyd The Picture of Dorian Gray A key mistake established by the main characters in The Picture of Dorian Gray‚ is that their focus is always set on one another’s outer beauty rather than their moral backbone. In Oscar Wilde’s time era the society that he lived in was significantly influenced by the way people looked and dressed rather than the quality of their character. Lord Henry is the perfect example for someone who is only concerned with one’s outward appearance and social

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    Oscar Wilde observations on disobedience were changing every year he continued his observations. Disobedience progressed to a less meaningful thing throughout the course of history up to this day. History plays a major role in disobedience development‚ because it tells you whether or not we have chosen to use disobedience to the roots we started using it with or not‚ and the answer to that is no because we have diminished the true value of disobedience and rebellious. Martin luther king is a person

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    The Importance of Being Earnest is a well-known play‚ written by an Anglo-Irish playwright‚ novelist‚ poet‚ and critic. He is regarded as one of the greatest playwrights of the Victorian Era. He was born in Dublin on 16 October 1854. In his lifetime he wrote nine plays‚ one novel‚ and numerous poems‚ short stories‚ and essays. Among his work the most popular and well-known are “The Picture of Dorian Gray”‚ “The Importance of Being Earnest”‚ “The Ballad of Reading Gaol”. Wilde was a proponent of

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    A Woman of No Importance

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    sarcastic because she makes sarcastic comments on Hester’s country; (line 6‚ act 1). She also dismisses Americas ‘open spaces’ and this acts as a metaphor as it describes the liberation in which America has to offer. Lady caroline is portrayed by Oscar Wilde as ethnocentric; basing other cultures on her society’s standards. This also shows the differentiation between the victorian upper class and the working class. Lady Caroline considers those that work to be inferior; (line 41-42 act 1). She also

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    An Ideal husband

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    An Ideal Husband In the story An Ideal husband by Oscar Wilde‚ there many themes. Some of the themes that are represented by the movie are‚ rich versus poor. Another is theme is how the rich have much more influence over the poor. The third theme is how the powerful tends to make the life of the weak miserable. Lies often bring unnecessary problems whilst the truth does indeed make everything much simpler‚ another theme of the movie. However the most intriguing theme‚ in my personal opinion is the

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    Dorian Gray

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    The Picture of Dorian Gray Describe the personality of a particular character. Include example. Basil Hallward is an artist and a friend of Lord Henry. On his search for pure beauty to put into his paintings he met Dorian Gray. He befriends him‚ and starts to paint him in all sorts of environments. After a while he decides to paint Dorian as he is. Basil becomes obsessed with Dorian Gray after meeting him at the party. He claims that Dorian possesses a beauty so rare that it has helped him realize

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