Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Dorian Gray, Critics
- Mike Haldenby
- "proclamation of Wilde's sexuality"
- "Wilde wants Dorian's death to represent a
glorious sacrifice, and the ultimate triumph of
aestheticism"
- "explores Wilde's own views on art"
- "Wilde lays himself
bare in his fiction"
- "allowing his characters to
articulate his own sentiments"
- "His voice speaks loudly on every page"
- "shamelessly promoting his corrupt
lifestyle through his work"
- "Basil Hallward represents Wilde's pure commitment to
Aestheticism"
- "Wilde's voice was most clearly heard through Wotton"
- "Sibyl Vane evokes some striking parallels with his marriage"
- Simon Callow
- "morality was the preserve of lesser spirits"
- "Wilde stands nakedly revealed"
- "Hallward helped to create the monster of
his own destruction"
- "novel grips hard, sustaining a disturbing
atmosphere of gothic suspense"
- "seems to speak
dangerously frankly
of his own situation"
- "dialogue walks on stilts"
- "Wilde was a slave of beauty"
- "depiction of Wotton is a self portrait"
- "Dorian is the eternal boy with
whom Wilde is eternally in
love"
- Anne Varty
- "Epigram is not exclusively the symptom of Wotton's moral
vision, but also of the corrupt aristocratic society"
- "culture... leads a double life: it can see
beauty and innocence, but knows they are
irrevocably lost"
- "Mephistophelean
voice of Lord Henry"
- "homosexuality is also represented as a possible
force of redemption"
- Vane's: "whole episode is written in a style that
parodies the conventional melodrama of the
period"
- "extraordinary
anthology of styles"
- "Wilde is exclusively concerned with
the effects of action, rather than action
itself"
- "mother is portrayed as a victim of the style"
- "she has no other medium with which to
represent life to herself"
- "experienced cynicism of Henry's
voice always makes him seem
significantly older than Dorian"
- "Throughout the novel, vice and virtue are
described by the rhetoric of aesthetics"