Aesthetics in Oscar Wilde’s Only Novel The Picture of Dorian Gray
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Abstract
Oscar Wilde's only novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray, is a classical novel that treats
the philosophical study of beauty and taste. This philosophical novel associated
mostly with art. Wilde introduced 'aesthetics' in the novel and he represented it
throughout his main male characters (Dorian Gray, Henry Wotton; and Basil
Hallward). The purpose of this study was to know how Oscar Wilde promoted the
philosophy of art throughout the novel, and to claim if it evoked an erotic pleasure
within the characters. The main characters treat all the aesthetics’ issues and reflect
Oscar Wilde’s personal life. Wilde represented “homosexuality” and “art” in the
characters’ personality. As a result, the three male characters are the representative of
art and what he has lived during the Victorian age. It means that he saw Basil
Hallward as an artist who creates beautiful things and Dorian Gray as an artwork or
the object of pleasure to both Henry Wotton and Basil Hallward. However, Henry
Wotton was the critic and the philosopher who criticizes a framework. We can say that
the characters had an erotic or a homosexual relationship and the novel The Picture of
Dorian Gray was considered as an artistic piece of work.
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https://theses.univ-temouchent.edu.dz/opac_css/doc_num.php?explnum_id=2128
