Audiolibro: Oscar Wilde: His Life and Confessions
- Download Author's Introduction audio
- Download I. Oscar's Father and Mother on Trial audio
- Download II. Oscar Wilde as a Schoolboy audio
- Download III. Trinity, Dublin: Magdalen, Oxford audio
- Download IV. Formative Influences: Oscar's Poems audio
- Download V. Oscar's Quarrel with Whistler and Marriage audio
- Download VI. Oscar Wilde's Faith and Practice audio
- Download VII. Oscar's Reputation and Supporters audio
- Download VIII. Oscar's Growth to Originality About 1890 audio
- Download IX. The Summer of Success: Oscar's First Play audio
- Download X. The First Meeting with Lord Alfred Douglas audio
- Download XI. The Threatening Cloud Draws Nearer audio
- Download XII. Danger Signals: the Challenge audio
- Download XIII. Oscar Attacks Queensberry and is Worsted audio
- Download XIV. How Genius is Persecuted in England audio
- Download XV. The Queen vs. Wilde: The First Trial audio
- Download XVI. Escape Rejected: The Second Trial and Sentence audio
- Download XVII. Prison and the Effects of Punishment audio
- Download XVIII. Mitigation of Punishment; but not Release audio
- Download XIXa. His St. Martin's Summer: His Best Work - Part One audio
- Download XIXb. His St. Martin's Summer: His Best Work - Part Two audio
- Download XX. The Results of His Second Fall: His Genius audio
- Download XXI. His Sense of Rivalry; His Love of Life and Laziness audio
- Download XXII. "A Great Romantic Passion!" audio
- Download XXIII. His Judgments of Writers and of Women audio
- Download XXIV. We Argue About His "Pet Vice" and Punishment audio
- Download XXV. The Last Hope Lost audio
- Download XXVI. The End audio
- Download XXVII. A Last Word audio
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Descripción
Consumers of biography are familiar with the division between memoirs of the living or recently dead written by those who "knew" the subject more or less intimately, and the more objective or scholarly accounts produced by later generations.
In the case of Wilde, as presented to us by Frank Harris, we are in a way doubly estranged from the subject. We meet with Oscar the charismatic talker, whose tone of voice can never be reproduced – even if a more scrupulous biographer had set down his words accurately – and we are perhaps already aware of him as Wilde the self-destructive celebrity who uneasily fills the place of the premier gay icon and martyr in our contemporary view.
Neither of these images will do. We need to read as many accounts as possible. Harris, though himself a self-advertising literary and sexual buccaneer, takes a wincingly representative view of Wilde’s homophile activity: for him it is a patrician excrescence, the abominable vice of the few, contracted at English boarding schools – though thankfully “not infectious” as far as he himself is concerned.
What a long road we have to travel to arrive at the essentially gay man of today! But there are many shortcuts to take us back to where we came from… (Summary by Martin Geeson)
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