Victorian Context: Beauty
Aestheticism Movement 1860 – 1900
- ‘Art serves no other purpose than to offer beauty’
- Victorians believed art could be used as a tool for social education and moral enlightenment
- Aestheticism Movement sought to free art for social responsibility
- Doctrine that art exists for the sake of beauty and in no easy serves political, didactic or other purposes
- Pre-Raphaelite brotherhood – art for art’s sake. Women’s roles similar to art ⇒ olt thee to be looked at
The Picture of Dorian Grey – Oscar Wilde
Oscar Wilde
- Oxford graduate – art critic and leading proponent of principles of aestheticism
- 1981: publishes The Portrait of Dorian Gray – seen as immoral by Victorian critics
- Unconventional in his writing and life – affair with a young man led to arest on charge of ‘gross indecency’ (homosexuality) → imprisoned for 2yrs and died 3yrs after being let out
- Considered a dandy: elegant man, impose great importance to their appearance
Hedonism: pursuit of pleasure; sensual self indulgence
Narcissism: Pursuit of gratification from vanity or egotism,admiration for oneself
Subversive Beauty – Victorian Bodies of Expression
- Victorian heroes/heroines bearing traditional types of beauty become important symbols of moral purity among middle class readership
- Female idea in ‘the angel in the house’ poems seem in many ways a non person, but is always physically flawless
- Non person = unrealistic, can’t be achieved, far from realism → still seen in 21st century in social media e.g plastic surgery, filtes, facetune
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