Drawing on correspondence and periodical advertising as well as paratextual and bibliographic detail, this paper compares editions of the three most prominent texts falsely associated with Oscar Wilde: The Green Carnation (1894), an intimate satire on Wilde’s relationship with Lord Alfred Douglas actually written by Douglas’ friend Robert Smythe Hichens; “The Priest and the Acolyte” (1894), a paedophilic story written by John Francis Bloxam and presented as evidence against Wilde during his libel trial and then privately reprinted; and the erotic novel Teleny (1893), which is still attributed to Wilde today. His name appeared in tandem with these novels over the course of a century, linking him further with sex and scandal. Two separate edi...
This paper will attempt to provide a comparative survey of the four comedies of Oscar Wilde (Lady Wi...
Oscar Wilde’s successful 1890s works were something new within Victorian comedy. He reinvents a the...
The present paper aims at sifting through Oscar Wilde’s carceral/post-carceral writings: De Profundi...
Drawing on correspondence and periodical advertising as well as paratextual and bibliographic detail...
Oscar Wilde, the celebrated author of The Picture of Dorian Gray and The Importance of Being Earnest...
Wilde’s three trials in 1895 served, in effect, as an obscenity prosecution of The Picture of Dorian...
Wilde’s three trials in 1895 served, in effect, as an obscenity prosecution of The Picture of Dorian...
Neo-Victorian Villains offers a varied and stimulating range of essays on the afterlives of Victoria...
The controversy surrounding the integrity and originality of Harvard University Press’s unexpurgated...
This article will outline the inequalities of the relationship between the Star-Child and his tempor...
The final stage of Oscar Wilde’s life was marked by an accumulation of unexpected events which culm...
On 28 February 1895 Oscar Wilde arrived at his club, the Albemarle, after an absence of several week...
Oscar Wilde's practices of plagiarism across genres are seen as part of a neo-classical tradition. ...
University of Minnesota, Morris production of Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde by Mo...
‘It is the spectator, and not life, that art really mirrors,’ writes Oscar Wilde in his ‘Preface’ to...
This paper will attempt to provide a comparative survey of the four comedies of Oscar Wilde (Lady Wi...
Oscar Wilde’s successful 1890s works were something new within Victorian comedy. He reinvents a the...
The present paper aims at sifting through Oscar Wilde’s carceral/post-carceral writings: De Profundi...
Drawing on correspondence and periodical advertising as well as paratextual and bibliographic detail...
Oscar Wilde, the celebrated author of The Picture of Dorian Gray and The Importance of Being Earnest...
Wilde’s three trials in 1895 served, in effect, as an obscenity prosecution of The Picture of Dorian...
Wilde’s three trials in 1895 served, in effect, as an obscenity prosecution of The Picture of Dorian...
Neo-Victorian Villains offers a varied and stimulating range of essays on the afterlives of Victoria...
The controversy surrounding the integrity and originality of Harvard University Press’s unexpurgated...
This article will outline the inequalities of the relationship between the Star-Child and his tempor...
The final stage of Oscar Wilde’s life was marked by an accumulation of unexpected events which culm...
On 28 February 1895 Oscar Wilde arrived at his club, the Albemarle, after an absence of several week...
Oscar Wilde's practices of plagiarism across genres are seen as part of a neo-classical tradition. ...
University of Minnesota, Morris production of Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde by Mo...
‘It is the spectator, and not life, that art really mirrors,’ writes Oscar Wilde in his ‘Preface’ to...
This paper will attempt to provide a comparative survey of the four comedies of Oscar Wilde (Lady Wi...
Oscar Wilde’s successful 1890s works were something new within Victorian comedy. He reinvents a the...
The present paper aims at sifting through Oscar Wilde’s carceral/post-carceral writings: De Profundi...