Oscar Wilde Research Paper

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To this day, Oscar Wilde is still a very talked about personality. In “Oscar Wilde’s Lasting Significance,” David Walsh wrote: it has proven difficult for artists and intellectuals of the most diverse persuasions to ignore him.” Historically speaking, Oscar Wilde, unlike other writers of his time, has been more distinguished because not only his witty writing style, satiric plays, and fearless exposure of social problems of the time, but because of his extreme aestheticism. He lived in a society that valued traditions which he fought tenaciously against. It is undeniable that Oscar Wilde has left a mark, great or small, in history.
Writes such as Charles Dickens, “the most famous and successful Victorian novelist of them all,” as Itcher Magazine …show more content…

According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica, It was Oscar Wilde who truly gave fame—with his great involvement— to the Aesthetic movement. It was Oscar Wilde who, with his extravagant style, became the celebrity symbol of the movement. It was Oscar Wilde who started the trend of unstructured dresses, floral embroidery, hair colored with henna, and velvet jackets, which was ridiculed by many. And It was Oscar Wilde who caused such movement to fade in popularity after it was associated with his accusation and trial of “gross indecency” with men. The flamboyant and wild writer, as his name hints, had a very full of accomplishments, influential, and controversial life which makes him important to …show more content…

There are a few references to historical events such as the issue of Home Rule for Ireland described in The Home Rule Crisis: 1912-14. William Gladstone, Liberal prime minister implicated the British Liberal party to support the self-governance of Ireland, insisted that it was time to let Ireland govern themselves and “prove that England’s civilizing instructions had left a positive mark on the Irish people” (50). The Irish question allowed for controversy and debate among Victorians. It also allowed for the topic about the Irish racial character and England’s self-prescribe Anglo-Saxon lineage (51). In act one of the play, Lady Bracknell interrogates Jack to decide whether he is a good candidate to marry her daughter Gwendolen since marrying a person of a well known name, good social status, and having real estate on the right side of town was of importance to upper-class Victorians. Among the questions of money and name Lady Bracknell asks, she also bring up political views. Jack responds that he is a Liberal Unionist, those who did not support Home Rule and the interrogator appears relieved. This scene also shows readers once again how the Victorians care little for right or wrong but social