The Importance of Being Paradoxical: Maternal Presence in the Works of Oscar WildeFairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1997 - 144 strán (strany) Patrick M. Horan presents his own biography of Speranza and Wilde to illustrate that they were, paradoxically, both rebellious and conventional. He terms this contradictory impulse to upset and maintain the status quo "conventional Bohemianism." Horan then explores Speranza's presence in Wilde's literature and stresses that he shared her love of paradox, which he used to explain his contradictory views about nationalism, feminism, love, motherhood, and imprisonment. Horan argues that, even though Wilde longed to be recognized by fashionable London society, he was "self-alienated" because he was hailed as the son of an Irish nationalist poet. He illustrates that feminism was problematic for both mother and son - they were both trailblazing feminists. Nevertheless, Speranza idealized wives as self-sacrificing and submissive, and Wilde idealized female lovers as objects of beauty. Horan asserts that Speranza's love of Irish myth fostered young Wilde's love of fantasy, which is evidenced in his fairy tales and The Picture of Dorian Gray. He concludes that Wilde wrote fantasy, in part, to identify humanity's inhumanity, to acknowledge that love is often unreciprocated, and to affirm the naturalness of homosexuality. He also proposes that Wilde wrote fiction and drama, to present the self-sacrificing nature of motherhood; his mother's characters clearly exhibit Speranza's at once conventional and Bohemian personality. Finally, the author demonstrates that in "De Profundis," Wilde acknowledged Speranza's wise and paradoxical credo that sorrow brings joy. |
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Strana 57
... female heroes are clearly more independent than Shaw's : for instance , Shaw's " wayward " title character in Mrs. Warren's Profession is forced to become wayward for financial and social reasons . Wilde's “ wayward ” Mrs. Arbuthnot ...
... female heroes are clearly more independent than Shaw's : for instance , Shaw's " wayward " title character in Mrs. Warren's Profession is forced to become wayward for financial and social reasons . Wilde's “ wayward ” Mrs. Arbuthnot ...
Strana 60
... female , could write poetry and prose . BEAUTY AND EDUCATION Wilde announced in A Woman of No Importance14 that there should not be " one law for men and another law for women " ( WNI , 450 ) . In this play , he juxtaposed his feminist ...
... female , could write poetry and prose . BEAUTY AND EDUCATION Wilde announced in A Woman of No Importance14 that there should not be " one law for men and another law for women " ( WNI , 450 ) . In this play , he juxtaposed his feminist ...
Strana 65
... female to the reserved English housewife . Speranza agreed with her son that the English female was weak in comparison to her highly vocal American counter- part ( E , 131 ) , but she hoped that the English female would learn from ...
... female to the reserved English housewife . Speranza agreed with her son that the English female was weak in comparison to her highly vocal American counter- part ( E , 131 ) , but she hoped that the English female would learn from ...
Obsah
Acknowledgments | 9 |
Eleutheria Poems | 37 |
and Early Prose | 56 |
Autorské práva | |
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acknowledged admired American Arbuthnot argues artistic assert Ave Imperatrix beauty Bohemian Canterville Ghost Consequently conventional Critical daughter Dorian Gray Douglas's dress Earnest Eleutheria Elgee English Erlynne essay example fairy father female feminist fiction G. B. Shaw Happy Prince Herodias homosexual husband Ibid ideal Importance inhumane Ireland Irish poet Jane Francesca Elgee Lady Bracknell Lady Queensbury Lady Wilde Lady Windermere's Fan literary Lord Alfred Douglas Lord Henry lover marriage melodramatic Melville Miss Prism mother characters never Nevertheless notion once Oscar Wilde paradoxical Picture of Dorian play poetry political prison Profundis Reading Gaol reveal Richard Ellmann Salomé Schmidgall sexual shares Speranza's Sir William social society soul Sper Speranza and Wilde Speranza's belief Star-Child story Sybil tells tion told Vane Vyvyan Holland W. B. Yeats Wilde believed Wilde New York Wilde shared Wilde wrote Wilde's Wilde's early William Andrews Clark Windermere woman Woman's World women writing Wyndham young