Title: Oscar Fingal O
1Oscar Fingal OFlahertie Wills Wilde
2Oscars Early years
- He was born Oct. 16, 1854 in Dublin Ireland
- His father was a successful surgeon his
- mother was a writer and literary hostess
- (reputation and status were important).
- He was well educated and was a graduate
- of Oxford College. (Harry Potter was filmed
there.) - - The building was
- called
- Christ Church
- (even though
- it is not
- a church.
3College Years
- While in college, Wilde became a part of the
Aesthetics Movement (Art for the sake of Art,
devotion to beauty). This was a 19th century
European movement that emphasized aesthetic
values over moral or social themes. - While in college he also found a love for
literature. - Even tough Oscar became a writer, he saw writing
as an outlet for ideas, a place to put his
thoughts, and not a craft. - His views contrast with those of a man named
William Morris. He believed in the artistry of
making things (furniture, tapestry) everything
of value had to be crafted with time and care.
(opposite of the industrial revolution,
factories) - Oscar believed things should just look good, he
didnt care how they were made or who made them
(opposite of Morris). Art was not supposed to do
anything except be beautiful!
4College Years
Oscar in his velour suit. (not a normal pose!)
Inside the lunch hall at Oxford. (Used as the
dining hall in HP)
5London
- After college he moved to the city of London to
pursue a literary career. London was the hub for
everything! - Here he wrote novels, plays, poems and worked as
a literary critic (high status job).
6Writing Career
- In 1891 he wrote The Picture of Dorian Gray.
- He was most well known for writing satirized
plays like, The Importance of Being Earnest. - In Ernest he is making fun of the overly
wealthy and their over-the-top behavior and
luxury. They judged people unfairly and he
didnt like that so he is making this known. He
could also be referring to the unfair judgment
from Bosies (love interest) father.
7The Importance of Being Ernest
Ben Barnes as Dorian Gray!
8Victorian Period - 1847-1901
- Queen Victoria was on the throne of England while
Wilde lived in London. - She embodied conservatism (supports minimal and
gradual change in society seeks to preserve
things as they are, emphasizing stability and
continuity) and asked her subjects to do the
same. - She made it a law to have
- marriages, births and
- deaths public record.
- Marriages became legal
- not just we say we are married.
- There was a huge chasm
- between rich and poor
- Poverty was at its highest.
9Victorian Period continued
- Industrialization began during this time.
- Factories began to assemble things quicker than
in the past (assembly lines). - This boom in industry made England very wealthy.
They imported these good all over. - This money made the rich, richer!
10Class Structure in Victorian London
- Upper Royalty (have a title Lord, Duke),
lived off old money and/or interest of that
money, did not work it was not gosch (cool) to
work, overtly well educated (multiple languages,
useless information), live in the West Side
(clean, fresh, bright, manicured, carriages,
space) - Middle Actors, Lawyers, Doctors, Writers had
money, but needed to work had luxuries, but not
to the extent of the wealthy - Lower had to work to survive laborers
uneducated illiterate (no public schools)
11Poverty in London
- Nineteenth-century Britain saw a huge population
increase accompanied by rapid urbanization
stimulated by the industrial revolution. The
large numbers of skilled and unskilled people
looking for work suppressed wages down to barely
subsistence level (they were barely surviving!). - Available housing was scarce and expensive,
resulting in overcrowding. These problems were
magnified in London, where the population grew at
record rates. Large houses were turned into flats
and tenements, and as landlords failed to
maintain these dwellings, slum housing developed.
12Poverty Continued
- There was no public sewage system.
- The streets had a tidal ditch running through it
and people would throw their sewage in these
ditches from their windows (look out below). - This ditch contained the only water that the
people in the streets had to drink. - Children between the ages of 8 15 or the
elderly, often became mudlarks. Mudlarks would
search in the muddy shores of the River Thames
during low tide, scavenging for anything that
could be resold (bits of coal, scrap iron) and
sometimes, when occasion offered, pilfering from
river traffic. People dwelling near the river
could scrape a subsistence living this way. - For the mudlarks, work conditions were filthy and
uncomfortable, as excrement and waste would wash
onto the shores from the raw sewage. - Mudlarks would often get cuts from broken glass
left on the shore. The income generated was
seldom more than skimpy but mudlarks had a
degree of independence, since the hours they
worked were entirely at their own discretion and
they also kept everything they made as a result
of their own labor.
13London Through the Haze
London through the hazeAbout this image
In the nineteenth century the air around London
was heavily polluted by industrial smoke and
factory pollution. The smog made the city (mainly
the East Side) a very dark and unhealthy place to
live. - No pollution regulations, London Fog,
city covered in soot (chimneys burned coal)
14Understanding the Queen
- Victoria was the niece to King George IV.
- The King had no direct heirs to the throne and
Victoria was named the successor. - She was groomed from a young age to rule. She had
nannies, education, learned art, history - languages.
- She was 18 when she took the throne.
15Victorian Period
- While on the throne, the King implemented the
Reform Act for the Poor (whosoever will not work
ought not to live). - Workhouses were the solution. (place where those
unable to support themselves were offered
accommodation and employment) - The idea was to keep England rich at the expense
of the poor. - Because of the reform,
- there was a greater
- separation between
- the poor and the rich.
16Child Labor
- The Victorian era became notorious for employing
young children in factories and mines and as
chimney sweeps. Children were expected to help
towards the family budget, often working long
hours (12-15 hrs.) in dangerous jobs and low
wages. - Agile boys were employed by the chimney sweeps
small children were employed to scramble under
machinery to retrieve cotton bobbins and
children were also employed to work in coal mines
to crawl through tunnels too narrow and low for
adults. Children also worked as errand boys,
crossing sweepers, shoe blacks, or selling
matches, flowers and other cheap goods. - Many children got stuck in the chimneys that
they were sweeping and eventually died. In
factories it was not uncommon for children to
lose limbs crawling under machinery to pick
things up. - Several Factory Acts were passed to prevent the
exploitation of children in the workplace.
Children of poor families would leave school at
the age of eight and were then forced to go to
work. School was not free at this time public
schools were not in existence yet. (This is why
only the rich were educated. To be well educated
was a status symbol.)
17Children Continued
- Famous people, like Charles Dickens (A Christmas
Carol, Oliver Twist), used their writings or
their ability to be in the public eye, to help
the children and the poor. - At the time, there were no hospitals for
children, so if your child got sick, and you
could not afford a doctor, they would most likely
die. - Orphanages were also horrible places. Children
were abused and usually starving.
18Continuation
- Dickens founded the first Childrens hospital
he also - began the first real orphanage that helped place
children into good homes. - Although there were advocates for children and
the poor, there were those that believed in
Dandyism. - Wilde believed in the Dandy ideas. A famous
dandy, Baudelaire, commented that the dandies had
"no profession other than elegance...no other
status but that of cultivating the idea of beauty
in their own person....The dandy must aspire to
be sublime without interruption he must live and
sleep before a mirror." (Seigel, 98-99) - The Dandy is walking art, pure vanity.
19- Anyone who lives within their means suffers
from a lack of imagination. - Oscar Wilde
- To love oneself is the beginning of a lifelong
romance. - Oscar Wilde
20Continuation
- Dandyism was the idea of pursuing happiness.
- That was a mans only true occupation it did
not matter the cost. - If drugs, art, homosexuality, murder, and/or
women were the things that made a man happy, then
he was to seek them out. - Wilde and others like him gravitated towards this
idea, because it seemed to better match the idea
of Victorian life self servant. - If crimes happened, it wasnt someone like Wilde
that would be a suspect he was wealthy.
21Dandyism vs. Victorianism
- True Victorians lived by a high moral standard.
- Queen Victoria believed in morals and the
institution of marriage. - It was thought that the poor were morally corrupt
and must have done something to deserve being
poor. - The wealthy were thought to be good people and
that they did not commit crimes. - Homosexuality, prostitution, murder, drugs,
infidelity, were all poor crimes.
22Wildes Private life
- Wilde married Constance Lloyd in 1884.
- They had two sons - Cyril Vyvyan.
- Although he was married, he began an affair with
Lord Alfred Douglas, aka Bosie. - Douglas was the son of the
- Marquise of Queensberry.
- Being a man of Victorian
- standards, the Marquise was
- outraged at his son and
- Wildes affair.
23Continuation
- The Marquise publically announced that Wilde was
a homosexual, and that Wilde was taking advantage
of his son. - Wilde sued the Marquise for slander.
- This began the first public trial of
homosexuality in Victorian London. - The trial was made a public record and the
newspapers made Wilde out to be a demon.
24The Trial
- After being publically humiliated, Wildes wife
filed for divorce and moved away with their
children. - Wilde argued that it was Douglas that pursued him
and spent all of his money. - Wilde felt betrayed when the courts ruled that he
was guilty of gross indecency, and was sentenced
to 2 years in prison, doing hard labor.
25Prison Life
- While in prison, Wilde spent 12 to 15 hours on
the Treadmill as punishment. - Although he was mad that Douglas did not defend
him in court, Wilde still wrote him the longest
love letter ever publish. It was titled De
Profundis and was published publically for all to
read.
26Life After Prison
- Wilde was released after serving his time.
- He was reunited with Bosie, but the wounds were
too deep. - He moved to Paris and tried to rekindle his
writing career, but he wasnt successful. - He died alone and penniless on November 30, 1900.