Oscar Wilde
"To live is the rarest thing in the world. Most people exist, that is all"Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) was a playwright, poet, novelist, story-writer, journalist, essayist, epigrammist, father, husband, and convicted homosexual. He was a daunting wit, a committed aesthete, and remains a lasting icon. Oscar Fingal O'Flahterie Wilde was born in Dublin on 16 October, 1854, the second of three children. His father, Sir William Wilde, was Ireland's best oto-optamologic, knighted for medical services, and collector and publisher of Irish folklore. His mother, Jane Francesca Wilde, was an Irish nationalist, a poet who published under the pseudonym 'Speranza', and the centre of a literary salon. In February 1867 Oscar's little sister Isola died, and he carried a lock of her hair thereafter. By the time he finished school in 1871, Wilde had won a scholarship to Trinity College, Dublin, where he studied classics with John Pentland Mahaffy and Robert Yelverton Turrell. Mahaffy, whom Wilde called his 'first and best teacher', would later inspire Wilde's character Prince Paul Maraloffski in Vera. In his final year Wilde won Trinity College's highest academic award in Greek, the Berkeley Gold Medal, and received a demyship to study Greats and Classics at Magdalen College, Oxford. Read more.
| # | Resource Title | Description | Contributor |
|---|---|---|---|
| 11 | 2. Wilde, Victorian and Modernist | Sos Eltis gives the second lecture in her series on Oscar Wilde, focussing on his place in the… | Sos Eltis |
| 12 | 1. The Art of Biography and the Biography of Art | The first lecture in the Oscar Wilde series in which Sos Eltis talks about Wilde's life and his… | Sos Eltis |
| 13 | Oscar Wilde's Women | Sophie Duncan introduces Oscar Wilde by setting him in an accurate historical context. | Sophie Duncan |
| 14 | Essays, criticisms and reviews | London : Privately printed [for Wright and Jones?] | |
| 15 | Oscar Wilde reads The Ballad of Reading Gaol | ||
| 16 | The Soul of Man under Socialism | ||
| 17 | De Profundis | The Rise of Historical Criticism [published in incomplete form 1905 and completed form in 1908] | |
| 18 | The Picture of Dorian Gray | ||
| 19 | Lord Arthur Savile's Crime, and other stories | Content: Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime The Canterville Ghost [1887] The Sphinx Without a… | |
| 20 | A House of Pomegranates | Content: The Young King The Birthday of the Infanta The Fisherman and His Soul The… |