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Oscar Wilde - An Ideal Husband AO3 (context) and AO5 (critics)

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Clearly written revision notes for the context and critical analysis/ interpretation of the Oscar Wilde play 'An Ideal Husband', suitable for A Level, AS Level and GCSE study

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Uploaded on
June 30, 2022
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Written in
2021/2022
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Oscar Wilde ‘An Ideal Husband’ Context
The Background
‘I took the drama, the most objective form known to art, and made it as personal a mode
of expression as the lyric or the sonnet’ – Wilde  play = personal form of expression
Critics on ‘An Ideal Husband’
John Ruskin
Leading English art (literature, poetry etc…) critic of Victorian era
Believed that art should  communicate truth above all things = contrast to the modern
art world (art for art’s sake)
Walter Pater
English essayist, literary & art critic
Asserted that life had to be lived intensely with an ideal of beauty
Believed that art should  exist for its own sake and not to serve any other purpose
Opposite to Ruskin
Aestheticism
Wilde = aesthete
British decadent writers = inspired by Pater & his essays  ‘life had to be lived intensely,
with an ideal of beauty’
“Art for Art’s Sake”
Artists & writers of Aesthetic style tend to profess that the arts should provide sensuous
pleasure rather than convey moral or sentimental messages  reject Ruskin ideas
Art didn’t have any truthful/ teaching purpose  only needed to be beautiful and give
pleasure
Life should copy art
Wilde  the world should be judged on its beauty rather than its moral value
Dandyism
A Dandy: a man who takes great care with his clothing & general appearance, especially
one who is nonchalant in demeanour & develops aristocratic hobbies  a flamboyant
male regardless of sexual orientation
Dandyism: the style or conduct of a dandy; a literary and artistic style of the latter part of
the 19th century marked by artificiality & excessive refinement

, England = had very rigid system of social mores  Wilde = rebelled against these & the play
dramatizes this…
Posing the Dandy against more ‘respectable’ characters
1895
Period of Wilde’s love affair with Lord Alfred Douglas  homosexual affair = illegal at time
Trial turned against Wilde  friends & family reject him to protect themselves…
Sir Robert Chiltern = criticism of society abandoning Wilde to protect their reputation
Wilde sank into drug addiction & died in Paris in 1900
The Play
Genre
Contemporary problem play
Epigrammatic language: each character talking with a crystallised, non-naturalistic wit
which complicates notions of sincerity, self-expression, and truth
Difference between men and women in love  “its entire psychology – the difference in
which man loves a woman from that in which a woman loves a man, the passion that
women have for making ideals (which is their weakness) and the weakness of a man who
dare not show his imperfections to the thing he loves” - Wilde
 Draws influence from several play styles
 French well-made play with its complex and precise plotting
 Farce & melodrama
 A society drama engaging with contemporary issues
Wilde = vastly popular before being found to be homosexual  play criticises hypocrisy of
society: praise one minute and criticism the next:
 The play has revealed English High
society and government as in thrall to
wealth at birth, hypocritically veiling its
failings with a supposed adherence to
high moral ideals
The play does NOT end with the bettering of society: the Chilterns may each have learnt
greater wisdom and self-knowledge in the play’s events, but there is no suggestion of any
wider reform in a society which worships wealth while flattering itself with a reputation for
high morals




Women in the Play

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