The New Hellenism: Oscar Wilde and ancient Greece

I examine Wilde’s Hellenism in terms of the specific texts, editions and institutions through which he encountered ancient Greece. The late-nineteenth-century professionalisation of classical scholarship and the rise of the new science of archaeology from the 1870s onwards endangered the status of a...

पूर्ण विवरण

ग्रंथसूची विवरण
मुख्य लेखक: Ross, IA
अन्य लेखक: Sloan, J
स्वरूप: थीसिस
भाषा:English
प्रकाशित: 2008
विषय:
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author Ross, IA
author2 Sloan, J
author_facet Sloan, J
Ross, IA
author_sort Ross, IA
collection OXFORD
description I examine Wilde’s Hellenism in terms of the specific texts, editions and institutions through which he encountered ancient Greece. The late-nineteenth-century professionalisation of classical scholarship and the rise of the new science of archaeology from the 1870s onwards endangered the status of antiquity as a textual source of ideal fictions rather than a material object of positivist study. The major theme of my thesis is Wilde’s relationship with archaeology and his efforts to preserve Greece as an imaginative resource and a model for right conduct. From his childhood Wilde had accompanied his father Sir William Wilde on digs around Ireland. Sir William’s ethnological interests led him to posit a common racial origin for Celts and Greeks; thus, for Wilde, to read a Greek text was to intuit native affinity. Chapters 1–3 trace his education, his travels in Greece, his involvement with the founding of the Hellenic Society, and his defence of the archaeologically accurate stage spectaculars of the 1880s, arguing that in his close association with supporters of archaeology such as J.P. Mahaffy and George Macmillan Wilde exemplifies the new kind of Hellenist opposed by Benjamin Jowett and R.C. Jebb. Chapter 4 makes a case for Wilde’s final repudiation of archaeology and his return to the textual remains of Greek antiquity, present as an intertexual resource in his mature works. Thus I examine the role of Aristotle’s Ethics in 'The Soul of Man Under Socialism’ and of Platonism in the critical dialogues, The Picture of Dorian Gray and ‘The Portrait of Mr W.H.’ I present The Importance of Being Earnest as a self-conscious exercise in the New Comedy of Menander, concluding that Wilde ultimately returned to the anachronistic eclecticism of the Renaissance attitude to ancient texts.
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spelling oxford-uuid:574a4841-5fb9-4b1f-bd09-6965c9ecef1c2022-03-26T16:55:50ZThe New Hellenism: Oscar Wilde and ancient GreeceThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:574a4841-5fb9-4b1f-bd09-6965c9ecef1cRecreational & performing artsReception of Classical antiquityDramatic artsVisual art and representationEnglish Language and LiteratureHellenic (Classical Greek) literatureEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2008Ross, IASloan, JI examine Wilde’s Hellenism in terms of the specific texts, editions and institutions through which he encountered ancient Greece. The late-nineteenth-century professionalisation of classical scholarship and the rise of the new science of archaeology from the 1870s onwards endangered the status of antiquity as a textual source of ideal fictions rather than a material object of positivist study. The major theme of my thesis is Wilde’s relationship with archaeology and his efforts to preserve Greece as an imaginative resource and a model for right conduct. From his childhood Wilde had accompanied his father Sir William Wilde on digs around Ireland. Sir William’s ethnological interests led him to posit a common racial origin for Celts and Greeks; thus, for Wilde, to read a Greek text was to intuit native affinity. Chapters 1–3 trace his education, his travels in Greece, his involvement with the founding of the Hellenic Society, and his defence of the archaeologically accurate stage spectaculars of the 1880s, arguing that in his close association with supporters of archaeology such as J.P. Mahaffy and George Macmillan Wilde exemplifies the new kind of Hellenist opposed by Benjamin Jowett and R.C. Jebb. Chapter 4 makes a case for Wilde’s final repudiation of archaeology and his return to the textual remains of Greek antiquity, present as an intertexual resource in his mature works. Thus I examine the role of Aristotle’s Ethics in 'The Soul of Man Under Socialism’ and of Platonism in the critical dialogues, The Picture of Dorian Gray and ‘The Portrait of Mr W.H.’ I present The Importance of Being Earnest as a self-conscious exercise in the New Comedy of Menander, concluding that Wilde ultimately returned to the anachronistic eclecticism of the Renaissance attitude to ancient texts.
spellingShingle Recreational & performing arts
Reception of Classical antiquity
Dramatic arts
Visual art and representation
English Language and Literature
Hellenic (Classical Greek) literature
Ross, IA
The New Hellenism: Oscar Wilde and ancient Greece
title The New Hellenism: Oscar Wilde and ancient Greece
title_full The New Hellenism: Oscar Wilde and ancient Greece
title_fullStr The New Hellenism: Oscar Wilde and ancient Greece
title_full_unstemmed The New Hellenism: Oscar Wilde and ancient Greece
title_short The New Hellenism: Oscar Wilde and ancient Greece
title_sort new hellenism oscar wilde and ancient greece
topic Recreational & performing arts
Reception of Classical antiquity
Dramatic arts
Visual art and representation
English Language and Literature
Hellenic (Classical Greek) literature
work_keys_str_mv AT rossia thenewhellenismoscarwildeandancientgreece
AT rossia newhellenismoscarwildeandancientgreece