When the art of posing was exploited by Oscar Wilde and bodybuilding performer Eugen Sandow, both achieved worldwide notoriety. While Wilde fashioned but concealed his body as the effeminate aesthete, Sandow fashioned and revealed his body as a naked Herculean god for both camera and stage. Yet after the Labouchère Amendment, when Wilde was persecuted as a poseur and prosecuted, Sandow was not censored, even though his homosexuality and homosexual following were a well-known public secret. Amidst the homophobic panic unleashed by the Wilde trials, Sandow’s posing was reframed as Sandow’s Physical Culture, repackaged as a patriotic strategy for achieving imperial manliness and National Efficiency, while providing licit new rituals for intens...
Neo-Victorian Villains offers a varied and stimulating range of essays on the afterlives of Victoria...
Since his death in 1900, Oscar Wilde and his characters have featured in hundreds of novels, short s...
This article treats Oscar Wilde\u27s The Picture of Dorian Gray as culturally antagonistic but also ...
After the third trial of Oscar Wilde when paranoia of insidious ‘inversion’ peaked, Eugen Sandow’s p...
Oscar Wilde, the celebrated author of The Picture of Dorian Gray and The Importance of Being Earnest...
For 15 years in Victorian England, Oscar Wilde was able to carry on like the famous camp queen of ou...
This book explained what Lord Queensbury meant when he accused Oscar Wilde of having posed as a sodo...
An essay is presented on the emergence of modern bodybuilding as portrayed by Eugen Sandow, an inter...
This article will outline the inequalities of the relationship between the Star-Child and his tempor...
The last few decades of 19th Century Victorian London witnessed a dramatic spike in sodomy persecuti...
The aim of this study has been to examine six books about Oscar Wilde’s homosexuality during the yea...
This essay examines the way in which Oscar Wilde\u27s play The Importance of Being Earnest challenge...
This book reveals how art and sex promoted the desire for the genetically perfect body. Its eight ch...
In her article “Disability, Victorian Biopolitics and Oscar Wilde\u27s Dorian Gray,” Hiu Wai Wong di...
This PhD thesis aims to explore the concept of the “queer body” as a historiographical tool through ...
Neo-Victorian Villains offers a varied and stimulating range of essays on the afterlives of Victoria...
Since his death in 1900, Oscar Wilde and his characters have featured in hundreds of novels, short s...
This article treats Oscar Wilde\u27s The Picture of Dorian Gray as culturally antagonistic but also ...
After the third trial of Oscar Wilde when paranoia of insidious ‘inversion’ peaked, Eugen Sandow’s p...
Oscar Wilde, the celebrated author of The Picture of Dorian Gray and The Importance of Being Earnest...
For 15 years in Victorian England, Oscar Wilde was able to carry on like the famous camp queen of ou...
This book explained what Lord Queensbury meant when he accused Oscar Wilde of having posed as a sodo...
An essay is presented on the emergence of modern bodybuilding as portrayed by Eugen Sandow, an inter...
This article will outline the inequalities of the relationship between the Star-Child and his tempor...
The last few decades of 19th Century Victorian London witnessed a dramatic spike in sodomy persecuti...
The aim of this study has been to examine six books about Oscar Wilde’s homosexuality during the yea...
This essay examines the way in which Oscar Wilde\u27s play The Importance of Being Earnest challenge...
This book reveals how art and sex promoted the desire for the genetically perfect body. Its eight ch...
In her article “Disability, Victorian Biopolitics and Oscar Wilde\u27s Dorian Gray,” Hiu Wai Wong di...
This PhD thesis aims to explore the concept of the “queer body” as a historiographical tool through ...
Neo-Victorian Villains offers a varied and stimulating range of essays on the afterlives of Victoria...
Since his death in 1900, Oscar Wilde and his characters have featured in hundreds of novels, short s...
This article treats Oscar Wilde\u27s The Picture of Dorian Gray as culturally antagonistic but also ...