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    Aestheticism and Dorian Gray

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    Professor Margaret Wiley ENG160 December 3‚ 2012 A Picture of Dorian Gray: A Queer and Aesthetic Text Oscar Wilde lived in 1800s Victorian England‚ during the Aesthetic Movement. He had been known for his involvement in the movement‚ however more infamously for his crime against homosexuality. In 1895‚ Oscar Wilde had been imprisoned for homosexual offenses‚ and used against him in court was his own novel‚ A Picture Of Dorian Gray. Oscar Wilde’s novel has been argued to function as a queer text

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    Dorian gray

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    the story‚ The Picture of Dorian Gray‚ Oscar Wilde weaves his contradictions and inner struggles within his characters‚ noting self-opposition and redefining his own individual aesthetic devotion. Wilde was known to be an influencing presence in the aesthetic movement during the Victorian period‚ and throughout the novel he depicts the truth of his beliefs in portions beneath his characters. Dorian Gray becomes an outlet for Wilde’s own vicarious pursuit of aestheticism‚ and is seen as who Wilde

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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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    around them. In the novel The Picture of Dorian Gray ‚ written by Oscar Wilde‚ the author provides recurring examples of influence to demonstrate that being swayed by external influences is the forfeit of one’s individuality which often leads to one’s destruction. In the novel‚ Lord Henry influences Dorian Gray to the point where Dorian loses all respect‚ dignity‚ and integrity that he had and eventually leads him to experience his downfall. Dorian Gray influences over unfortunate youths and leads

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    Dorian Gray

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    the view of Dorian Gray‚ the novel is heavy with moral and spiritual corruption” In this essay I am going to be disguising how the novel “The picture of Dorian Gray” is engulfed with moral and spiritual corruption. For someone to be morally corrupted it means they don’t care about what is good and bad and only focus on themselves and what will make them happy‚ it sometimes could involve hurting and killing people along the way. In this case it could be used to illustrate how Dorian Gray gave his soul

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    Dorian Gray

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    they are in. However‚ in The Picture of Dorian Gray the main character Dorian says “Each of us has Heaven and Hell in him‚ Basil!” (Wilde 133). What Dorian is saying is that no matter how one is raised‚ and what environment one is in they will always do good and bad. In‚ The Picture of Dorian Gray the character Dorian by nature is a humble charming good- natured fellow; however‚ once he meets Harry he turns into a secretive‚ sordid‚ egotistic human being. Dorian is a chief example for a person who contains

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    Dorian Gray

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    Literature: Wilde believed that art has its own value. That it is beautiful and therefore has worth‚ and it can serve no other purpose either political or moral Genre of his novel - Gothic - Philosophical - Comedy of manners THE PICTURE OF DORIAN GRAY -His only novel First appear in the magazine and was criticized as scandalous and immoral O.W was very disappointed with its reception THEMES - The purpose of Art - The supremacy (importance0 of Youth and Beauty - The superficial Nature (Criticism)

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    The Picture of Dorian Gray

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    1 Homoerotic codes in The Picture of Dorian Gray Luljeta Muriqi A60 Literary Seminar Spring 2007 Department of English Lund University Supervisor: C. Wadsjö Lecaros 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION................................................................1 AESTHETICISM .................................................................2 HELLENISM .......................................................................4 Art .................................................................

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    Dorian Gray

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    Dorian Gray Presentation Arts purpose and Wilde’s philosophy on Art. As we know from works such as the Water Babies‚ Victorian society deemed it necessary for art to be useful‚ partly to entertain but mainly to morally educate. Wilde clearly states that ‘All art is quite useless’. This was one of his many conflictions with Victorian society. An artist should not make art for any purpose and yet this very book is used in education today undermining his work. Wilde remarks: To reveal

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    Picture of Dorian Gray

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    Although Freud’s psychodynamic theory was not published until over 30 years after Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray‚ there are apparent parallels the reader can draw while reading the novel with this in mind. The theory‚ consisting of three parts‚ touches on the impulsivity of human nature and how our reckless desires are compromised with our higher moral code. In The Picture of Dorian Gray we see the main character unravel as a result of immoral and unnatural acts. The Id‚ Ego and Superego can

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