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Picture of Dorian Gray

Wilde, OscarPage, Norman(Edited by)
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In Oscar Wilde's famous novel, Dorian Gray is tempted by Henry Wotton to sell his soul in order to hold on to beauty and youth.

Dorian succumbs and murders the portrait painter Basil Haliward, who stands between him and his goal.

Though in the end vice is punished and virtue rewarded, the novel remains one of the most important expressions of fin de sicle decadence.

It is in the preface to the expanded edition of The Picture of Dorian Gray that Wilde coined the most famous expression of his aesthetic: "e;There is no such thing as a moral or an immoral book.

Books are well-written or badly-written. That is all."e;Like other Broadview Editions, this edition includes a wide range of materials from the period that help to set the text in context.

In particular, the editor locates the text both in relation to elements in the mainstream culture of the day (such as the aesthetes); and in relation to the gay subculture.

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£16.95
Product Details
Broadview Press
1460403967 / 9781460403969
eBook (EPUB)
23/02/1998
Canada
English
279 pages
Copy: 20%; print: 20%
Quiz No: 238925, Points 1.00, Book Level 4.80,
Middle Years - Key Stage 2 Learn More